J Immunol. 2025 Sep 16:vkaf243. doi: 10.1093/jimmun/vkaf243. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
Disruptor of telomeric silencing 1-like (DOT1L) is an epigenetic regulator that promotes gene expression by methylating lysine 79 on histone H3 and recruits transcription factors to gene targets. DOT1L is also an oncogenic driver in cancers that affect developing lymphocytes, yet how DOT1L activity regulates B-cell maturation remains poorly defined. Here, we use deep-sequencing and conditional knockout models to elucidate gene targets of H3K79me2, and the mechanistic contribution of DOT1L, during key stages of murine B-cell development. In the bone marrow, Dot1l was upregulated in pro B cells. Deep sequencing revealed that H3K79me2 accumulated during maturation. The genomic distribution of H3K79me2 peaks indicated that DOT1L regulates transcription and the cell cycle across different stages of B-cell development. As such, DOT1L was found to be essential for pre B-cell expansion, leading to a significant decrease in pre B cells in the absence of DOT1L and a skewing of the B-cell receptor repertoire to favor proximal VH usage. In addition to the effective generation of a diverse B-cell pool, DOT1L was also required to establish the marginal zone (MZ) B-cell gene expression program. Attenuation of MZ B cells and a bottlenecking at the pre-MZ B-cell stage in Dot1L-deficient mice correlated to H3K79me2 peaks at key MZ-regulatory genes such as Lfng and Dock10 in developing B cells. In contrast, Dot1l was reexpressed in germinal center (GC) B cells postimmunization to deposit H3K79me2 at key GC B-cell gene loci during GC differentiation. Together, these data demonstrate a vital role for DOT1L during B-cell lymphopoiesis, MZ B-cell generation, and GC B-cell biology.
PMID:40972012 | DOI:10.1093/jimmun/vkaf243