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The Atherosclerosis Risk Variant rs2107595 Mediates Allele-Specific Transcriptional Regulation of HDAC9 via E2F3 and Rb1

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posted on 2020-04-07, 08:38 authored by Matthias Prestel, Caroline Prell-Schicker, Tom Webb, Rainer Malik, Barbara Lindner, Natalie Ziesch, Monika Rex-Haffner, Simone Roeh, Thanatip Viturawong, Manuel Lehm, Michal Mokry, Hester den Ruijter, Saskia Haitjema, Yaw Asare, Flavia Soellner, Maryam Ghaderi Najafabadi, Redouane Aherrahrou, Mete Civelek, Nilesh J Samani, Matthias Mann, Christof Haffner, Martin Dichgans
Background and Purpose- Genome-wide association studies have identified the HDAC9 (histone deacetylase 9) gene region as a major risk locus for atherosclerotic stroke and coronary artery disease in humans. Previous results suggest a role of altered HDAC9 expression levels as the underlying disease mechanism. rs2107595, the lead single nucleotide polymorphism for stroke and coronary artery disease resides in noncoding DNA and colocalizes with histone modification marks suggestive of enhancer elements. Methods- To determine the mechanisms by which genetic variation at rs2107595 regulates HDAC9 expression and thus vascular risk we employed targeted resequencing, proteome-wide search for allele-specific nuclear binding partners, chromatin immunoprecipitation, genome-editing, reporter assays, circularized chromosome conformation capture, and gain- and loss-of-function experiments in cultured human cell lines and primary immune cells. Results- Targeted resequencing of the HDAC9 locus in patients with atherosclerotic stroke and controls supported candidacy of rs2107595 as the causative single nucleotide polymorphism. A proteomic search for nuclear binding partners revealed preferential binding of the E2F3/TFDP1/Rb1 complex (E2F transcription factor 3/transcription factor Dp-1/Retinoblastoma 1) to the rs2107595 common allele, consistent with the disruption of an E2F3 consensus site by the risk allele. Gain- and loss-of-function studies showed a regulatory effect of E2F/Rb proteins on HDAC9 expression. Compared with the common allele, the rs2107595 risk allele exhibited higher transcriptional capacity in luciferase assays and was associated with higher HDAC9 mRNA levels in primary macrophages and genome-edited Jurkat cells. Circularized chromosome conformation capture revealed a genomic interaction of the rs2107595 region with the HDAC9 promoter, which was stronger for the common allele as was the in vivo interaction with E2F3 and Rb1 determined by chromatin immunoprecipitation. Gain-of-function experiments in isogenic Jurkat cells demonstrated a key role of E2F3 in mediating rs2107595-dependent transcriptional regulation of HDAC9. Conclusions- Collectively, our findings imply allele-specific transcriptional regulation of HDAC9 via E2F3 and Rb1 as a major mechanism mediating vascular risk at rs2107595.

Funding

This work was supported by grants from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (CRC 1123 and Munich Cluster for Systems Neurology), Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung (e:AtheroSysMed), FP7/2007–2103 European Union project CVgenes@target (Health-F2-2013–601456), Leducq Foundation CADgenomics program, European Union Horizon2020 projects SVDs@target (No.66688) and CoSTREAM (No.667375), and the Vascular Dementia Research Foundation. Drs Webb and Samani are supported by the British Heart Foundation. Dr Samani is a National Health Research senior investigator. Dr Mann was funded by the Max Planck Society and Rédouane Aherrahrou by the American Heart Association. Dr Mokry is supported by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research, the Netherlands Organization for Health Research and Development, Dutch Heart Foundation and Leducq Foundation.

History

Citation

Stroke. 2019;50:2651–2660

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

STROKE

Volume

50

Issue

10

Pagination

2651 - 2660 (10)

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS

issn

0039-2499

eissn

1524-4628

Acceptance date

2019-07-03

Copyright date

2019

Available date

2019-09-10

Publisher version

https://www.ahajournals.org/doi/full/10.1161/STROKEAHA.119.026112

Spatial coverage

United States

Language

English