| Literature DB >> 25478630 |
Mariana Maschietto, Jocelyn Charlton, Daniela Perotti, Paolo Radice, James I Geller, Kathy Pritchard-Jones, Mark Weeks.
Abstract
It is hypothesised that Wilms tumour (WT) results from aberrant renal development due to its embryonic morphology, associated undifferentiated precursor lesions (termed nephrogenic rests) and embryonic kidney-like chromatin and gene expression profiles. From the study of overgrowth syndrome-associated WT, germline dysregulation was identified in the imprinted region at 11p15 affecting imprinted genes IGF2 and H19. This is also detected in ~70% sporadic cases, making this the most common somatic molecular aberration in WT. This review summarises the critical discussion at an international workshop held under the auspices of The European Network for Cancer Research in Children and Adolescents (ENCCA) consortium, where the potential for drug development to target IGF2 and the WT epigenome was debated. Here, we consider current cancer treatments which include targeting the IGF pathway and the use of methylation agents alone or in combination with other drugs in clinical trials of paediatric cancers. Finally, we discuss the possibility of the use of these drugs to treat patients with WT.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25478630 PMCID: PMC4226664 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.2485
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Epigenetics alterations found in Wilms tumours
| Aberration | Finding within Wilms tumour |
|---|---|
| Frequency of 19% and associated with | |
| Frequency of 87.5%, results in overexpression [ | |
| Global hypomethylation | Results in genome instability in tumour cells [ |
| Gain of methylation at 6p22.1, 6p21.32 and 11q13.5 | Biomarker for WT, can be detected in the circulation of patients [ |
| Frequency of 73% [ | |
| Hypermethylation of a CTCF binding site downstream of | Correlated with high WT1 expression [ |
| Hypermethylation of protocadherin cluster at 5q31 | Results in expression loss of these proteins at the cell surface [ |
| LOI 11p15 | Frequency of 69%, results in overexpression of IGF2 and down-regulation of H19 [ |
| P16 hypermethylation | Frequency of 23% [ |
| Frequency of 54% [ | |
| Results in biallelic expression [ |
Figure 1A summary of agents that target either the IGF pathway or the epigenome
IGF signalling occurs through stimulation of insulin-like growth factor 1 receptors (IGF1R; shown in blue in the cell membrane) by IGF2 and results in activation of the PI3K and MAPK signalling pathways, an increase in protein synthesis, cell cycle progression, cell growth and avoiding apoptosis. Activation of the IGF pathway through overexpression of IGF2 is frequently seen in Wilms tumour (WT) and is therefore a viable therapeutic target. IGF pathway inhibitors include antisense oligonucleotides which target IGF1R mRNA (green) to prevent their translation into functional protein or molecules that target the IGF1R, which include AMG-479 in combination with Gemcitabine, BMS-754807, Figitumumab, IMC-A12 (alone or with Gemcitabine), NVP-AEW541 and R1507. As frequent epigenomic aberrations are also found in WT (see main text and Table 1) targeting enzymes that regulate DNA methylation (DNA methyal transferases; DNMT) or that regulate histone modifications (histone deacetylases; HDAC) may be a viable therapy for patients with WT. In terms of targeting the epigenome, 5-azacytidine, 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine and Zebularine are DNMT inhibitors and Vorinostat and Romidepsin are both HDAC inhibitors, preventing normal enzymatic activity.
A summary of the agents discussed that target the IGF pathway or epigenome
| Mechanism | Compound | Type | Status | Tumour (patients enrolled) |
| IGF2 inhibitor | m-Cresol | small molecule | developed | not tested |
| Myristic acid | small molecule | developed | not tested | |
| IGF1R inhibitor | BMS-754807 | ATP-competitive small molecule | developed | xenograft models |
| IMC-A12 | monoclonal antibody | phase III | hepatocellular carcinoma (n=24) | |
| NVP-AEW541 | small molecule inhibitor | pre-clinical | Ewing sarcoma and neuroblastoma | |
| Figitumumab (CP-751,871) | monoclonal antibody | phases II/III | Ewing's sarcoma (n=138) | |
| R1507 | monoclonal antibody | phases I/II | Ewing's sarcoma and thymoma (n=29) | |
| AMG-479 | monoclonal antibody | phases III | pancreatic carcinoma (n=800) | |
| gemcitabine | monoclonal antibody | phases III | pancreatic carcinoma (n=800) | |
| ganitumab | monoclonal antibody | phases III | pancreatic carcinoma (n=800) | |
| figitumumab | monoclonal antibody | phases I | myeloma (n=47) | |
| dalotuzumab | monoclonal antibody | phase I | paediatric solid tumours (n=21) | |
| cixutumumab | monoclonal antibody | phases II | refractory solid tumours (n=10 patients with WT) | |
| linsitinib | small molecule inhibitor | phases II/III | non-small Cell Lung Cancer (n=205), ovarian cancer (n=79), adrenocortical carcinoma (n=139) | |
| DNA methyltransferase inhibitors | 5-azacytidine | analogue of cytidine | FDA approved for use | myelodysplastic syndrome, acute myeloid leukemia |
| 5-aza-2′-deoxycytidine | analogue of cytidine | FDA approved for use | myelodysplastic syndrome, acute myeloid leukemia | |
| MG98 | anti-sense nucleotides | phase I and II, terminated | metastatic renal cancer (n=17) | |
| Zebularine | analog of cytidine | developed | acute lymphoblastic leukemia | |
| GSK126 | small-molecule inhibitor of EZH2 methyltransferase activity | pre-clinical | EZH2 mutated B-cell lymphoma and follicular lymphoma | |
| histone remodelling inhibitors | suberanilohydroxamic acid | histone deacetylase inhibitors | FDA approved for use | cutaneous T-cell lymphoma |
| depsipeptide | amino acid-containing small molecule or chain | FDA approved for use | cutaneous T-cell lymphoma | |
| Romidepsin | histone deacetylase inhibitors | FDA approved for use | cutaneous T-cell lymphoma |