Loss of epigenetic suppression of retrotransposons with oncogenic potential in aging mammary luminal epithelial cells

Author:

Senapati ParijatORCID,Miyano Masaru,Sayaman Rosalyn W.ORCID,Basam Mudaser,Leung Amy,LaBarge Mark A.ORCID,Schones Dustin E.ORCID

Abstract

A primary function of DNA methylation in mammalian genomes is to repress transposable elements (TEs). The widespread methylation loss that is commonly observed in cancer cells results in the loss of epigenetic repression of TEs. The aging process is similarly characterized by changes to the methylome. However, the impact of these epigenomic alterations on TE silencing and the functional consequences of this have remained unclear. To assess the epigenetic regulation of TEs in aging, we profiled DNA methylation in human mammary luminal epithelial cells (LEps)—a key cell lineage implicated in age-related breast cancers—from younger and older women. We report here that several TE subfamilies function as regulatory elements in normal LEps, and a subset of these display consistent methylation changes with age. Methylation changes at these TEs occurred at lineage-specific transcription factor binding sites, consistent with loss of lineage specificity. Whereas TEs mainly showed methylation loss, CpG islands (CGIs) that are targets of the Polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2) show a gain of methylation in aging cells. Many TEs with methylation loss in aging LEps have evidence of regulatory activity in breast cancer samples. We furthermore show that methylation changes at TEs impact the regulation of genes associated with luminal breast cancers. These results indicate that aging leads to DNA methylation changes at TEs that undermine the maintenance of lineage specificity, potentially increasing susceptibility to breast cancer.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Neuroendocrine Tumor Research Foundation

National Cancer Institute

Department of Defense/Army Breast Cancer Era of Hope Scholar

Conrad N. Hilton Foundation

City of Hope Center for Cancer and Aging

City of Hope Program in Molecular and Cellular Biology

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics

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