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An epigenetic memory at the CYP1A gene in cancer-resistant, pollution-adapted killifish.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Carrothers, S; Trevisan, R; Jayasundara, N; Pelletier, N; Weeks, E; Meyer, JN; Giulio, RD; Weinhouse, C
Published in: bioRxiv
August 16, 2024

Human exposure to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) is a significant and growing public health problem. Frequent, high dose exposures are likely to increase due to a warming climate and increased frequency of large-scale wildfires. Here, we characterize an epigenetic memory at the cytochrome P450 1A (CYP1A) gene in a population of wild Fundulus heteroclitus that has adapted to chronic, extreme PAH pollution. In wild-type fish, CYP1A is highly induced by PAH. In PAH-tolerant fish, CYP1A induction is blunted. Since CYP1A metabolically activates PAH, this memory protects these fish from PAH-mediated cancer. However, PAH-tolerant fish reared in clean water recover CYP1A inducibility, indicating that blunted induction is a non-genetic memory of prior exposure. To explore this possibility, we bred depurated wild fish from PAH-sensitive and - tolerant populations, manually fertilized exposure-naïve embryos, and challenged them with PAH. We observed epigenetic control of the reversible memory of generational PAH stress in F1 PAH-tolerant embryos. Specifically, we observed a bivalent domain in the CYP1A promoter enhancer comprising both activating and repressive histone post-translational modifications. Activating modifications, relative to repressive ones, showed greater increases in response to PAH in sensitive embryos, relative to tolerant, consistent with greater gene activation. Also, PAH-tolerant adult fish showed persistent induction of CYP1A long after exposure cessation, which is consistent with defective CYP1A shutoff and recovery to baseline. Since CYP1A expression is inversely correlated with cancer risk, these results indicate that PAH-tolerant fish have epigenetic protection against PAH-induced cancer in early life that degrades in response to continuous gene activation.

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Published In

bioRxiv

DOI

EISSN

2692-8205

Publication Date

August 16, 2024

Location

United States
 

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Carrothers, S., Trevisan, R., Jayasundara, N., Pelletier, N., Weeks, E., Meyer, J. N., … Weinhouse, C. (2024). An epigenetic memory at the CYP1A gene in cancer-resistant, pollution-adapted killifish. BioRxiv. https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.08.14.607951
Carrothers, Samantha, Rafael Trevisan, Nishad Jayasundara, Nicole Pelletier, Emma Weeks, Joel N. Meyer, Richard Di Giulio, and Caren Weinhouse. “An epigenetic memory at the CYP1A gene in cancer-resistant, pollution-adapted killifish.BioRxiv, August 16, 2024. https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.08.14.607951.
Carrothers S, Trevisan R, Jayasundara N, Pelletier N, Weeks E, Meyer JN, et al. An epigenetic memory at the CYP1A gene in cancer-resistant, pollution-adapted killifish. bioRxiv. 2024 Aug 16;
Carrothers, Samantha, et al. “An epigenetic memory at the CYP1A gene in cancer-resistant, pollution-adapted killifish.BioRxiv, Aug. 2024. Pubmed, doi:10.1101/2024.08.14.607951.
Carrothers S, Trevisan R, Jayasundara N, Pelletier N, Weeks E, Meyer JN, Giulio RD, Weinhouse C. An epigenetic memory at the CYP1A gene in cancer-resistant, pollution-adapted killifish. bioRxiv. 2024 Aug 16;

Published In

bioRxiv

DOI

EISSN

2692-8205

Publication Date

August 16, 2024

Location

United States