| Literature DB >> 28446439 |
Berkley E Gryder1, Marielle E Yohe1,2, Hsien-Chao Chou1, Xiaohu Zhang3, Joana Marques4, Marco Wachtel4, Beat Schaefer4, Nirmalya Sen1, Young Song1, Alberto Gualtieri5, Silvia Pomella5, Rossella Rota5, Abigail Cleveland1, Xinyu Wen1, Sivasish Sindiri1, Jun S Wei1, Frederic G Barr6, Sudipto Das7, Thorkell Andresson7, Rajarshi Guha3, Madhu Lal-Nag3, Marc Ferrer3, Jack F Shern1,2, Keji Zhao8, Craig J Thomas3, Javed Khan9.
Abstract
Alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma is a life-threatening myogenic cancer of children and adolescent young adults, driven primarily by the chimeric transcription factor PAX3-FOXO1. The mechanisms by which PAX3-FOXO1 dysregulates chromatin are unknown. We find PAX3-FOXO1 reprograms the cis-regulatory landscape by inducing de novo super enhancers. PAX3-FOXO1 uses super enhancers to set up autoregulatory loops in collaboration with the master transcription factors MYOG, MYOD, and MYCN. This myogenic super enhancer circuitry is consistent across cell lines and primary tumors. Cells harboring the fusion gene are selectively sensitive to small-molecule inhibition of protein targets induced by, or bound to, PAX3-FOXO1-occupied super enhancers. Furthermore, PAX3-FOXO1 recruits and requires the BET bromodomain protein BRD4 to function at super enhancers, resulting in a complete dependence on BRD4 and a significant susceptibility to BRD inhibition. These results yield insights into the epigenetic functions of PAX3-FOXO1 and reveal a specific vulnerability that can be exploited for precision therapy.Significance: PAX3-FOXO1 drives pediatric fusion-positive rhabdomyosarcoma, and its chromatin-level functions are critical to understanding its oncogenic activity. We find that PAX3-FOXO1 establishes a myoblastic super enhancer landscape and creates a profound subtype-unique dependence on BET bromodomains, the inhibition of which ablates PAX3-FOXO1 function, providing a mechanistic rationale for exploring BET inhibitors for patients bearing PAX-fusion rhabdomyosarcoma. Cancer Discov; 7(8); 884-99. ©2017 AACR.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 783. ©2017 American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28446439 PMCID: PMC7802885 DOI: 10.1158/2159-8290.CD-16-1297
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Discov ISSN: 2159-8274 Impact factor: 39.397