The protocol details an in vitro murine carcinoma model of non-genetic defective transcription elongation. Here, chronic inhibition of CDK9 is used to repress productive elongation of RNA Pol II along pro-inflammatory response genes to mimic and study the clinically observed TEdeff phenomenon, present in about 20% of all cancer types.
We have previously reported that a subset of cancers is defined by global transcriptional deregulations with widespread deficiencies in mRNA transcription elongation (TE)—we call such cancers as TEdeff. Notably, TEdeff cancers are characterized by spurious transcription and faulty mRNA processing in a large set of genes, such as interferon/JAK/STAT and TNF/NF-κB pathways, leading to their suppression. The TEdeff subtype of tumors in renal cell carcinoma and metastatic melanoma patients significantly correlate with poor response and outcome in immunotherapy. Given the importance of investigating TEdeff cancers—as it portends a significant roadblock against immunotherapy—the goal of this protocol is to establish an in vitro TEdeff mouse model to study these widespread, non-genetic transcriptional abnormalities in cancers and gain new insights, novel uses for existing drugs, or find new strategies against such cancers. We detail the use of chronic flavopiridol mediated CDK9 inhibition to abrogate phosphorylation of serine 2 residue on the C-terminal repeat domain (CTD) of RNA polymerase II (RNA Pol II), suppressing the release of RNA Pol II into productive transcription elongation. Given that TEdeff cancers are not classified under any specific somatic mutation, a pharmacological model is advantageous, and best mimics the widespread transcriptional and epigenetic defects observed in them. The use of an optimized sublethal dose of flavopiridol is the only efficacious strategy in creating a generalizable model of non-genetic widespread disruption in transcription elongation and mRNA processing defects, closely mimicking the clinically observed TEdeff characteristics. Therefore, this model of TEdeff can be leveraged to dissect, cell-autonomous factors enabling them in resisting immune-mediated cell attack.
A key rate-limiting step in the expression of nearly all active genes is the transition of RNA polymerase II (RNA Pol II) from promoter-proximal pausing to productive elongation1,2. Given that epigenetic dysregulation of transcriptional elongation assists in the progression of multiple human malignancies defined as TEdeff, leading to suboptimal signaling in the pro-inflammatory response pathways amounting to a poor response and outcome to immunotherapy3, the overarching goal of this protocol is to establish a useful in vitro model to study these widespread non-genetic transcriptional abnormalities in cancers. In this light, the use of chronic pharmacological inhibition of CDK9 is an efficacious strategy for creating a generalizable model of non-genetic widespread disruption in transcription elongation and mRNA processing defects. The rationale behind using chronic CDK9 inhibition is that it abrogates phosphorylation of serine 2 residue on the C-terminal repeat domain (CTD) of RNA Pol II, thus repressing the release of RNA Pol II into productive transcription elongation. Also, TEdeff cancers, described previously by our group3, are not classified under any specific somatic mutation. Therefore, a non-genetic (pharmacological) model is advantageous and best mimics the widespread transcriptional and epigenetic defects observed in them. The method herein details the generation and characterization of chronic flavopiridol treatment model of murine cancer cells. This method demonstrably disrupts transcription elongation along genes characterized by longer genomic lengths, with poised promoters and inducible expressions such as TNF/NF-κB and interferon/STAT signaling, profoundly controlled at the level of transcription elongation3,4,5. Overall, this optimized murine cell line model of transcriptional elongation defects—the only model to our knowledge to study the newly described TEdeff tumors—drives resistance to anti-tumor immune attack, rendering a useful system to exploit and examine the vulnerabilities of non-genetic defects in core transcription machinery in cancers vis-à-vis immune-mediated cell attack.
The Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee and Institutional Biosafety Committee of the Cincinnati Children’s Research Foundation approved all animal experimental procedures (IACUC protocol #2017-0061 and IBC protocol #IBC2016-0016), and these experiments were carried out in accordance with standards as described in the NIH Guide to the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals.
1. Chronic inhibition of RNA Pol II by flavopiridol treatment—basic strategy
2. Confirmatory immunoblot assay to assess defective RNA Pol II function and impairment of interferon (IFN) pathway and tumor necrosis factor (TNF) pathway signaling of in the generated mouse TEdeff model
3. Confirmatory assay to assess mRNA processing defects in the generated mouse TEdeff model
4. Confirmatory assay to assess the response of mouse TEdeff model to FasL mediated cell death
5. Exploratory assay to assess the response of mouse TEdeff model to antigen specific cytotoxic T-cell attack
Here, we provide a detailed scheme (Figure 1) to establish a TEdeff cell model obtained by chronic sub-lethal (Figure 2) treatment with flavopiridol at 25 nM. In Figure 3, on 3 days of treatment with flavopiridol, B16 OVA cells show partial characteristics of TEdeff but after one week of treatment, B16/F10 OVA cells show a profound loss of phosphorylation at serine 2 position on the CTD of RNA Pol II along with a significant decrease in H3K36me3—a histone modification implicated in defining exon boundaries and an inhibitor of run-away cryptic transcriptions. As a consequence, TEdeff cell model shows critical mRNA processing defects with manifestly increased ratios of improperly capped and non-poly-adenylated mRNAs (Figure 4A,B). Also, specific repression of key inflammatory response pathway genes and FasL mediated cell death pathway are seen in Figure 5 and Figure 6. The imposed resistance to interferon (IFN-α, IFNγ) and TNF-α stimulated phosphorylation of STAT1 and NFκB, and resistance to cell death by the death receptor ligand FasL drastically reduces the cytotoxicity of an immune cell attack against TEdeff tumors. These confirmatory techniques are designed to test the extent of influence chronic perturbation of transcription elongation has on a wide array of stimulus-responsive genes, and whether such a perturbation in a given mouse cell line model is adequate enough to prompt an acute dearth of functional mRNA in inflammatory response signaling genes, mimicking the basic essentialities of TEdeff cancers clinically. Based on our study of the flavopiridol treatment, the suppression of phosphorylation at the second serine residue (pSER2) of RNA Pol II CTD is critical, as it marks transcription elongation. A sublethal dose for any given mouse carcinoma cell line must achieve a reduction in pSER2 levels in addition to having an insignificant effect on the rate of growth and viability of the cell line. Although we consistently see a reduction in pSER2 and H3K36me3 levels on 25 nM flavopiridol treatments, it does not guarantee a repression of both pSTAT1 and pNFκB levels (on IFN-α, IFNγ and TNF-α stimulations, respectively). Each mouse carcinoma cell line is unique (B16/F10 OVA or CT26 cells cultured in different labs over a period of time may have slightly altered effects) and they may have either JAK1 or CCNT1 partially rescuing the effects of flavopiridol in suppressing the inflammatory response pathway genes. In such cases, the kinetics of pSTAT1 and pNFκB levels may need to be checked at different time points (5−70 min) to understand the temporality of flavopiridol mediated effects and its rescue by either JAK1 or CCNT1. Accordingly, JAK1 and/or CCNT1 may need to be knocked down to establish this model.
Once the flavopiridol model is established and characterized using the aforementioned assays, we provide an exploratory assay to test if the TEdeff cell model confers resistance to cytotoxic T-cell (CTL) attack. Based on our optimized protocol, flavopiridol treated B16/F10 cells stably overexpressing the OVA gene (B16 OVA) co-incubated with the activated CD8+ CTLs (specific for the OVA257-264 epitope) having selective toxicity to OVA-expressing cells (a gift from Dr. Stephen P. Schoenberger’s lab6) were not susceptible to OT-I CTL-mediated tumor lysis. B16/F10 OVA cells (not pretreated with flavopiridol) underwent massive cell death in this system, while B16/F10 parental cells survived, as they do not express OVA antigen (Figure 7). It is clear from the outcome of the suggested exploratory assay that chronic flavopiridol-induced TEdeff can bestow a means to escape from anti-tumor immune attack even in vivo. This can be further tested in in vivo tumor models to check the propensity of TEdeff models to escape innate and adaptive anti-tumor immune responses. Anti-asialo treatments could be used to regulate the activity of NK cells in vivo in tumor bearing mice. Also, immune checkpoint therapy (anti-CTLA4 and anti-PD1) can be administered to TEdeff tumor bearing mice.
In totality, the TEdeff confirmatory assays along with the suggested exploratory assay together demonstrate the utility of incorporating this TEdeff cell model in a whole host of other tumor-immune testing conditions. This model can help parse out the molecular details resulting from defective transcriptional elongation in tumor cells and their response to immune cell interactions.
Figure 1: Schematic representation of the work flow. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2: Cell growth characteristics of B16 OVA cells chronically treated with low-dose flavopiridol: Viability (measured by viability reagent) of control and flavopiridol-treated cells B16 OVA at indicated days post-treatment. This figure has been modified from Modur et al.3. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3: Confirmatory assay to assess RNA Pol II and histone profile: Immunoblots of indicated histone and RNA Pol II marks in B16 OVA cells treated with flavopiridol for 72 h or 1 week. This figure has been modified from Modur et al.3. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 4: Confirmatory assay to assess severe defects in mRNA processing. Ratios of 5′-uncapped to 5′-capped (A) and 3′-non-polyadenylated to 3′-polyadenylated (B) mRNA concentrations after rRNA depletion in the indicated cell lines. Error bars represent standard deviation based on three technical replicates. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 5: Confirmatory assay to assess cytokine stimulation profile. Immunoblots of STAT1, pSTAT1, NFκB and p NFκB in control and flavopiridol pre-treated B16 OVA cells stimulated with IFN-α, IFNγ or TNF-α for 30 min at (5 ng/mL). This figure has been modified from Modur et al.3. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 6: Confirmatory assay to assess resistance to FasL mediated cell death in vitro. Control and flavopiridol pre-treated B16 OVA cells treated with FasL for 24 h readout measured by viability assay. This figure has been modified from Modur et al.3. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 7: Exploratory assay to assess resistance of TEdeff model to antigen-restricted cytotoxic T cell mediated attack in vitro. Left: diagrammatic scheme of the exploratory assay. Right: relative viability of B16/F10-OVA cells co-cultured with activated CD8 + CTLs (1:1 ratio) isolated from the spleens of OT-I mice. P: Welch two-sample t-test. This figure has been modified from Modur et al.3. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
RNA Pol II elongation control has emerged as a decisive lever for regulating stimulus-responsive gene expression to the benefit of malignant cells5,7,8. Overcoming promoter-proximal pausing to elongation and subsequent mRNA production requires the kinase activity of P-TEFb9,10,11. Our model utilizes flavopiridol (25 nM), an inhibitor of the essential cyclin-dependent kinase CDK9, to mimic the defects observed during Pol II elongation in TEdeff cancers—a previously unknown phenotype in cancers discovered by our group previously3.
CDK9 kinase activity has long been known to be essential for phosphorylation of serine 2 residues in the CTD of the large subunit of Pol II. Critically, we have succeeded in optimizing flavopiridol treated chronic inhibition of CDK9 (25 nM for 1 week) in B16/F10 OVA such that, in addition to inhibiting CTD phosphorylation, 25 nM flavopiridol treatment for 1 week prevents proper post-transcriptional modifications of mRNA in an unanticipated way and effectively abrogates p-TEFb-dependent productive elongation along long genes such as pro-inflammatory response signaling genes, significantly altering their patterns of expression both at the mRNA and protein levels. To the best of our knowledge, there is no other model described in literature which effectively achieves the same.
This easy to establish, generalizable model of TEdeff can therefore be leveraged to dissect, both transcriptional and epigenetic modifications enabling TEdeff cancers to adapt to immune-mediated cell attack. Moreover, this murine model retains its TEdeff-like reduction of total and phospho- RNA Pol II levels 21 days after flavopiridol release in in vivo growth assay3 (not mentioned in the protocol here), suggesting the extent of stability of this non-genetic model for further in vivo experimentation. However, care must be taken to optimize the exact sublethal dose of flavopiridol for other murine lines (e.g., about 20 nM flavopiridol treatment for 1 week is the sublethal dose for MC38 murine carcinoma line; not used in this protocol), the impact of variation in cell plating density, culture conditions, and cytokine stimulation conditions may vary for different murine lines. The protocol described here gives a basic framework to minimize the variables known to be critical for the generation of TEdeff-like features by chronic CDK9 inhibition. In addition, human carcinoma cell lines, such as T47D and CAL51 have been tested with short-term (3 days) flavopiridol treatments giving rise to similar TEdeff-like RNA Pol II profiles, indicating the usefulness of flavopiridol based chronic inhibition of CDK9 mediated transcription elongation in creating even model human lines to study TEdeff.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
This work was in part supported by NCI (CA193549) and CCHMC Research Innovation Pilot awards to Kakajan Komurov, and Department of Defense (BC150484) award to Navneet Singh. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Cancer Institute or the Department of Defense. The funders had no role in the study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
hhis6FasL | Cell Signaling | 5452 | |
10X TBS | Bio-Rad | 170-6435 | |
12 well plates | Falcon | 353043 | |
20% methanol | Fisher Chemical | A412-4 | |
24-well plates | Falcon | 351147 | |
4–18% SDS polyacrylamide gel | Bio-Rad | 4561086 | |
4% Paraformaldehyde | Thermo Fisher Scientific | AAJ19943K2 | |
5% dry milk | Bio-Rad | 170-6404 | |
7-Methylguanosine antibody | BioVision | 6655-30T | |
96-well plates | Cellstar | 655180 | |
AF647-conjugated mouse CD8 | Biolegend | 100727 | |
antibiotic and antimycotic | Gibco | 15240-062 | |
anti-His antibody | Cell Signaling | 2366 P | |
Anti-Rabit | Cell Signaling | 7074 | Dilution 1:5000 |
Anti-Rat | Cell Signaling | 7077S | Dilution 1:5000 |
Bradford assay Kit | Bio-Rad | 5000121 | |
BSA | ACROS Organics | 24040-0100 | |
BV421-conjugated mouse CD45 | Biolegend | 109831 | |
crystal violet | Sigma | C3886-100G | |
DMEM | Gibco | 11965-092 | |
Dynabeads Oligo (dT)25 | Ambion | 61002 | |
FBS | Gibco | 45015 | |
Fixable Live/Dead staining dye e780 | eBioscience | 65-0865-14 | |
Flavopiridol | Selleckchem | S1230 | |
H3k36me3 | Abcam | ab9050 | Dilution 1:2000 |
IFN-α | R&D systems | 12100-1 | |
IFN-γ | R&D systems | 485-MI-100 | |
IMDM | Gibco | 12440053 | |
Immobilon Western Chemiluminescent HRP Substrate | Millipore | WBKLS0500 | |
MojoSort Mouse CD8 T Cell Isolation Kit | Biolegend | 480007 | |
NF-κB | Cell Signaling | 8242s | Dilution 1:1000 |
PBS | Gibco | 14190-144 | |
p-NF-κB | Cell Signaling | 3033s | Dilution 1:1000 |
p-Ser2-RNAPII | Active Motif | 61083 | Dilution 1:500 |
p-Ser5-RNAPII | Active Motif | 61085 | Dilution 1:1000 |
p-STAT1 | Cell Signaling | 7649s | Dilution 1:1000 |
RiboMinu Eukaryote Kit | Ambion | A10837-08 | |
RIPA buffer | Santa Cruz Biotechnology | sc-24948 | |
RNAPII | Active Motif | 61667 | Dilution 1:1000 |
STAT1 | Cell Signaling | 9175s | Dilution 1:1000 |
TNF-α | R&D systems | 410-MT-010 | |
total H3 | Cell Signaling | 4499 | Dilution 1:2000 |
Tri reagent | Sigma | T9424 | |
Triton | Sigma | T8787-50ML | |
Tween 20 | AA Hoefer | 9005-64-5 | |
β-Actin | Cell Signaling | 12620S | Dilution 1:5000 |
β-ME | G Biosciences | BC98 |