<HashMap><database>GEO</database><file_versions><headers><Content-Type>application/xml</Content-Type></headers><body><files><Other>ftp://ftp.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/series/GSE314nnn/GSE314777/</Other></files><type>primary</type></body><statusCode>OK</statusCode><statusCodeValue>200</statusCodeValue></file_versions><scores/><additional><omics_type>Other</omics_type><species>Homo sapiens</species><gds_type>Other</gds_type><full_dataset_link>https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSE314777</full_dataset_link><repository>GEO</repository><entry_type>GSE</entry_type></additional><is_claimable>false</is_claimable><name>Decoding 3D chromatin architecture reveals distinct enhancer classes underlying hierarchical gene regulation in prostate cancer</name><description>Background: The transcription process is controlled by non-coding regulatory elements, more than 70% of which are putative enhancers. These enhancers comprise over 600,000 regions and are marked by histone modifications. However, the mechanisms by which altered enhancers in cancer cooperate within the three-dimensional chromatin architecture to drive oncogenic programs remain poorly understood. Results: By integrating 201 H3K27ac ChIP seq datasets from prostate, we identify 3,216 high confidence prostate cancer-specific putative enhancers. Ultra high resolution chromatin interaction profiling by Region Capture Micro-C at a representative chr6q24.1 locus reveals that these enhancers form cancer specific, highly nested interactions with promoters that coalesce into a multi connected hub absent in normal prostate cells. CRISPR/Cas9 perturbations of these enhancers, examined one by one, distinguish enhancer classes within the hub. Deletion of a central enhancer collapses hub-wide enhancer activities and architecture, leading to the downregulation of target genes, impaired proliferation, and reduced clonogenic growth. In contrast, deletion of a redundant enhancer results in minimal transcriptional changes, as neighboring enhancers rescue cancer signaling through compensatory architectural rewiring that strengthens alternative enhancer-promoter interactions. We also observe that FOXA1, a pioneer transcription factor activated in prostate cancer, directly binds to these enhancers and regulates distinct enhancer classes, leading to varying degrees of chromatin accessibility and gene expression changes. Conclusions: These findings suggest that enhancers function in a coordinated manner, forming multi-connected cancer-specific chromatin interaction hubs, with distinct enhancer classes contributing differently to gene regulation. This study advances our ability to modulate gene expression in a cell type-specific manner, opening new avenues for precision therapies.</description><dates><publication>2026/06/15</publication></dates><accession>GSE314777</accession><cross_references><GSM>GSM9410361</GSM><GSM>GSM9410360</GSM><GSM>GSM9410352</GSM><GSM>GSM9410354</GSM><GSM>GSM9410353</GSM><GSM>GSM9410356</GSM><GSM>GSM9410355</GSM><GSM>GSM9410358</GSM><GSM>GSM9410357</GSM><GSM>GSM9410359</GSM><GPL>34284</GPL><GSE>314777</GSE><taxon>Homo sapiens</taxon></cross_references></HashMap>