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1.
Sci Adv ; 9(6): eade9238, 2023 02 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36753540

ABSTRACT

Rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) is a group of pediatric cancers with features of developing skeletal muscle. The cellular hierarchy and mechanisms leading to developmental arrest remain elusive. Here, we combined single-cell RNA sequencing, mass cytometry, and high-content imaging to resolve intratumoral heterogeneity of patient-derived primary RMS cultures. We show that the aggressive alveolar RMS (aRMS) subtype contains plastic muscle stem-like cells and cycling progenitors that drive tumor growth, and a subpopulation of differentiated cells that lost its proliferative potential and correlates with better outcomes. While chemotherapy eliminates cycling progenitors, it enriches aRMS for muscle stem-like cells. We screened for drugs hijacking aRMS toward clinically favorable subpopulations and identified a combination of RAF and MEK inhibitors that potently induces myogenic differentiation and inhibits tumor growth. Overall, our work provides insights into the developmental states underlying aRMS aggressiveness, chemoresistance, and progression and identifies the RAS pathway as a promising therapeutic target.


Subject(s)
Antineoplastic Agents , Rhabdomyosarcoma, Alveolar , Rhabdomyosarcoma , Child , Humans , Rhabdomyosarcoma, Alveolar/drug therapy , Rhabdomyosarcoma, Alveolar/genetics , Rhabdomyosarcoma, Alveolar/pathology , Rhabdomyosarcoma/drug therapy , Rhabdomyosarcoma/genetics , Rhabdomyosarcoma/pathology , Muscle, Skeletal/metabolism , Cell Differentiation , Antineoplastic Agents/therapeutic use , Cell Line, Tumor
2.
Cancer Discov ; 12(12): 2880-2905, 2022 12 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36305736

ABSTRACT

Diffuse midline gliomas are uniformly fatal pediatric central nervous system cancers that are refractory to standard-of-care therapeutic modalities. The primary genetic drivers are a set of recurrent amino acid substitutions in genes encoding histone H3 (H3K27M), which are currently undruggable. These H3K27M oncohistones perturb normal chromatin architecture, resulting in an aberrant epigenetic landscape. To interrogate for epigenetic dependencies, we performed a CRISPR screen and show that patient-derived H3K27M-glioma neurospheres are dependent on core components of the mammalian BAF (SWI/SNF) chromatin remodeling complex. The BAF complex maintains glioma stem cells in a cycling, oligodendrocyte precursor cell-like state, in which genetic perturbation of the BAF catalytic subunit SMARCA4 (BRG1), as well as pharmacologic suppression, opposes proliferation, promotes progression of differentiation along the astrocytic lineage, and improves overall survival of patient-derived xenograft models. In summary, we demonstrate that therapeutic inhibition of the BAF complex has translational potential for children with H3K27M gliomas. SIGNIFICANCE: Epigenetic dysregulation is at the core of H3K27M-glioma tumorigenesis. Here, we identify the BRG1-BAF complex as a critical regulator of enhancer and transcription factor landscapes, which maintain H3K27M glioma in their progenitor state, precluding glial differentiation, and establish pharmacologic targeting of the BAF complex as a novel treatment strategy for pediatric H3K27M glioma. See related commentary by Beytagh and Weiss, p. 2730. See related article by Mo et al., p. 2906.


Subject(s)
Epigenome , Glioma , Animals , Humans , Mutation , Glioma/genetics , Transcription Factors/genetics , Transcription Factors/metabolism , Neoplastic Stem Cells/metabolism , Mammals/genetics , Mammals/metabolism , DNA Helicases/genetics , Nuclear Proteins/genetics
3.
JCI Insight ; 7(19)2022 10 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36040810

ABSTRACT

Collateral lethality occurs when loss of a gene/protein renders cancer cells dependent on its remaining paralog. Combining genome-scale CRISPR/Cas9 loss-of-function screens with RNA sequencing in over 900 cancer cell lines, we found that cancers of nervous system lineage, including adult and pediatric gliomas and neuroblastomas, required the nuclear kinase vaccinia-related kinase 1 (VRK1) for their survival in vivo. VRK1 dependency was inversely correlated with expression of its paralog VRK2. VRK2 knockout sensitized cells to VRK1 loss, and conversely, VRK2 overexpression increased cell fitness in the setting of VRK1 loss. DNA methylation of the VRK2 promoter was associated with low VRK2 expression in human neuroblastomas and adult and pediatric gliomas. Mechanistically, depletion of VRK1 reduced barrier-to-autointegration factor phosphorylation during mitosis, resulting in DNA damage and apoptosis. Together, these studies identify VRK1 as a synthetic lethal target in VRK2 promoter-methylated adult and pediatric gliomas and neuroblastomas.


Subject(s)
Glioma , Neuroblastoma , Vaccinia , Child , Glioma/genetics , Humans , Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins , Nervous System , Neuroblastoma/genetics , Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases/genetics , Vaccinia virus
4.
Nat Commun ; 12(1): 6924, 2021 11 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34836971

ABSTRACT

Rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) is a pediatric malignancy of skeletal muscle lineage. The aggressive alveolar subtype is characterized by t(2;13) or t(1;13) translocations encoding for PAX3- or PAX7-FOXO1 chimeric transcription factors, respectively, and are referred to as fusion positive RMS (FP-RMS). The fusion gene alters the myogenic program and maintains the proliferative state while blocking terminal differentiation. Here, we investigated the contributions of chromatin regulatory complexes to FP-RMS tumor maintenance. We define the mSWI/SNF functional repertoire in FP-RMS. We find that SMARCA4 (encoding BRG1) is overexpressed in this malignancy compared to skeletal muscle and is essential for cell proliferation. Proteomic studies suggest proximity between PAX3-FOXO1 and BAF complexes, which is further supported by genome-wide binding profiles revealing enhancer colocalization of BAF with core regulatory transcription factors. Further, mSWI/SNF complexes localize to sites of de novo histone acetylation. Phenotypically, interference with mSWI/SNF complex function induces transcriptional activation of the skeletal muscle differentiation program associated with MYCN enhancer invasion at myogenic target genes, which is recapitulated by BRG1 targeting compounds. We conclude that inhibition of BRG1 overcomes the differentiation blockade of FP-RMS cells and may provide a therapeutic strategy for this lethal childhood tumor.


Subject(s)
Cell Differentiation , Cell Proliferation , Muscle Development/physiology , Rhabdomyosarcoma/genetics , Rhabdomyosarcoma/metabolism , Cell Line, Tumor , Child , Chromatin , DNA Helicases/metabolism , Epigenomics , Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic , Humans , Muscle, Skeletal , Nuclear Proteins/metabolism , Oncogene Proteins, Fusion/genetics , Oncogene Proteins, Fusion/metabolism , PAX7 Transcription Factor , Paired Box Transcription Factors/genetics , Paired Box Transcription Factors/metabolism , Proteomics , Transcription Factors/metabolism , Transcriptional Activation
5.
Elife ; 92020 08 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32744500

ABSTRACT

The NuRD complex subunit CHD4 is essential for fusion-positive rhabdomyosarcoma (FP-RMS) survival, but the mechanisms underlying this dependency are not understood. Here, a NuRD-specific CRISPR screen demonstrates that FP-RMS is particularly sensitive to CHD4 amongst the NuRD members. Mechanistically, NuRD complex containing CHD4 localizes to super-enhancers where CHD4 generates a chromatin architecture permissive for the binding of the tumor driver and fusion protein PAX3-FOXO1, allowing downstream transcription of its oncogenic program. Moreover, CHD4 depletion removes HDAC2 from the chromatin, leading to an increase and spread of histone acetylation, and prevents the positioning of RNA Polymerase 2 at promoters impeding transcription initiation. Strikingly, analysis of genome-wide cancer dependency databases identifies CHD4 as a general cancer vulnerability. Our findings describe CHD4, a classically defined repressor, as positive regulator of transcription and super-enhancer accessibility as well as establish this remodeler as an unexpected broad tumor susceptibility and promising drug target for cancer therapy.


Subject(s)
Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic , Mi-2 Nucleosome Remodeling and Deacetylase Complex/genetics , Rhabdomyosarcoma/genetics , Cell Line, Tumor , Humans , Mi-2 Nucleosome Remodeling and Deacetylase Complex/metabolism
6.
J Clin Invest ; 126(11): 4237-4249, 2016 11 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27760049

ABSTRACT

A vast number of cancer genes are transcription factors that drive tumorigenesis as oncogenic fusion proteins. Although the direct targeting of transcription factors remains challenging, therapies aimed at oncogenic fusion proteins are attractive as potential treatments for cancer. There is particular interest in targeting the oncogenic PAX3-FOXO1 fusion transcription factor, which induces alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma (aRMS), an aggressive cancer of skeletal muscle cells for which patient outcomes remain dismal. In this work, we have defined the interactome of PAX3-FOXO1 and screened 60 candidate interactors using siRNA-mediated depletion to identify candidates that affect fusion protein activity in aRMS cells. We report that chromodomain helicase DNA binding protein 4 (CHD4), an ATP-dependent chromatin remodeler, acts as crucial coregulator of PAX3-FOXO1 activity. CHD4 interacts with PAX3-FOXO1 via short DNA fragments. Together, they bind to regulatory regions of PAX3-FOXO1 target genes. Gene expression analysis suggested that CHD4 coregulatory activity is essential for a subset of PAX3-FOXO1 target genes. Depletion of CHD4 reduced cell viability of fusion-positive but not of fusion-negative RMS in vitro, which resembled loss of PAX3-FOXO1. It also caused specific regression of fusion-positive xenograft tumors in vivo. Therefore, this work identifies CHD4 as an epigenetic coregulator of PAX3-FOXO1 activity, providing rational evidence for CHD4 as a potential therapeutic target in aRMS.


Subject(s)
Autoantigens/metabolism , Epigenesis, Genetic , Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic , Mi-2 Nucleosome Remodeling and Deacetylase Complex/metabolism , Oncogene Proteins, Fusion/metabolism , Paired Box Transcription Factors/metabolism , Rhabdomyosarcoma, Alveolar/metabolism , Animals , Autoantigens/genetics , Cell Line, Tumor , Female , Heterografts , Humans , Mi-2 Nucleosome Remodeling and Deacetylase Complex/genetics , Mice, Inbred NOD , Mice, SCID , Neoplasm Transplantation , Oncogene Proteins, Fusion/genetics , Paired Box Transcription Factors/genetics , Rhabdomyosarcoma, Alveolar/genetics , Rhabdomyosarcoma, Alveolar/pathology
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