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Loss of KDM6A-mediated genomic instability and metabolic reprogramming regulates response to therapeutic perturbations in bladder cancer.

Nature communications 2026 Vol.17(1) p. 1382

Singh P, D'Rozario R, Chakraborty B, Meher S, Raychaudhuri D, Tannir AJ, Li Y, Majumdar A, Hawkins J, Xiong Y, Lorenzi P, Sharma P, Akdemir K, Pilie P, Jain AK, Lee BHL, Goswami S

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Mutations in epigenetic regulators are common in bladder cancer, yet their impact on therapeutic responses remains unclear.

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APA Singh P, D'Rozario R, et al. (2026). Loss of KDM6A-mediated genomic instability and metabolic reprogramming regulates response to therapeutic perturbations in bladder cancer.. Nature communications, 17(1), 1382. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-68132-2
MLA Singh P, et al.. "Loss of KDM6A-mediated genomic instability and metabolic reprogramming regulates response to therapeutic perturbations in bladder cancer.." Nature communications, vol. 17, no. 1, 2026, pp. 1382.
PMID 41501085

Abstract

Mutations in epigenetic regulators are common in bladder cancer, yet their impact on therapeutic responses remains unclear. Here, we identify that loss-of-function mutations in KDM6A, a histone demethylase altered in about 26% of advanced bladder cancers, are associated with poor survival after cisplatin chemotherapy, whereas they correlate with improved outcomes with anti-PD-1 therapy. Using CRISPR-Cas9-engineered murine and human bladder cancer models, we show that KDM6A deficiency increases formation of extrachromosomal circular DNA carrying chemoresistance loci, promoting cisplatin resistance. In parallel, KDM6A loss impairs DNA repair and rewires tumor metabolism, reducing glycolysis and lactate output. This metabolic shift diminishes histone lactylation in regulatory T cells, suppressing immunoregulatory genes and limiting expansion of PD-1 regulatory T cells. Collectively, our findings establish KDM6A mutation as a key regulator of therapeutic responses, providing a foundation for its use in guiding precision therapy in advanced bladder cancer.

MeSH Terms

Urinary Bladder Neoplasms; Animals; Histone Demethylases; Humans; Mice; Genomic Instability; Cell Line, Tumor; Cisplatin; Drug Resistance, Neoplasm; CRISPR-Cas Systems; DNA Repair; Female; Mice, Knockout; Loss of Function Mutation; Histones; Metabolic Reprogramming

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