Hi-C profiling in tissues reveals 3D chromatin-regulated breast tumor heterogeneity and tumor-specific looping-mediated biological pathways

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Abstract

Current knowledge in three-dimensional (3D) chromatin regulation in normal and disease states was mostly accumulated through Hi-C profiling in in vitro cell culture system. The limitations include failing to recapitulate disease-specific physiological properties and often lacking clinically relevant disease microenvironment. In this study, we conduct tissue-specific Hi-C profiling in a pilot cohort of 12 breast tissues comprising of two normal tissues (NTs) and ten ER+ breast tumor tissues (TTs) including five primary tumors (PTs), and five tamoxifen-treated recurrent tumors (RTs). We find largely preserved compartments, highly heterogeneous topological associated domains (TADs) and intensively variable chromatin loops among breast tumors, demonstrating 3D chromatin-regulated breast tumor heterogeneity. Further cross-examination identifies RT-specific looping-mediated biological pathways and suggests CA2, an enhancer-promoter looping (EPL)-mediated target gene within the bicarbonate transport metabolism pathway, might play a role in driving the tamoxifen resistance. Remarkably, the inhibition of CA2 not only impedes tumor growth both in vitro and in vivo , but also reverses chromatin looping. Our study thus yields significant mechanistic insights into the role and clinical relevance of 3D chromatin architecture in breast cancer endocrine resistance.

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