| Literature DB >> 31391125 |
Lisa Gabler1,2, Daniela Lötsch1,2,3, Dominik Kirchhofer1,2,3, Sushilla van Schoonhoven1,2, Hannah M Schmidt1,2,3, Lisa Mayr1,3, Christine Pirker2, Katharina Neumayer4, Carina Dinhof2, Lucia Kastler4, Amedeo A Azizi1,3, Christian Dorfer1,5, Thomas Czech1,5, Christine Haberler1,6, Andreas Peyrl1,3, Rajiv Kumar7, Irene Slavc1,3, Sabine Spiegl-Kreinecker4, Johannes Gojo8,9,10, Walter Berger1,2.
Abstract
The BRAF gene and the TERT promoter are among the most frequently altered genomic loci in low-grade (LGG) and high-grade-glioma (HGG), respectively. The coexistence of BRAF and TERT promoter aberrations characterizes a subset of aggressive glioma. Therefore, we investigated interactions between those alterations in malignant glioma. We analyzed co-occurrence of BRAFV600E and TERT promoter mutations in our clinical data (n = 8) in addition to published datasets (n = 103) and established a BRAFV600E-positive glioma cell panel (n = 9) for in vitro analyses. We investigated altered gene expression, signaling events and TERT promoter activity upon BRAF- and E-twenty-six (ETS)-factor inhibition by qRT-PCR, chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP), Western blots and luciferase reporter assays. TERT promoter mutations were significantly enriched in BRAFV600E-mutated HGG as compared to BRAFV600E-mutated LGG. In vitro, BRAFV600E/TERT promoter double-mutant glioma cells showed exceptional sensitivity towards BRAF-targeting agents. Remarkably, BRAF-inhibition attenuated TERT expression and TERT promoter activity exclusively in double-mutant models, while TERT expression was undetectable in BRAFV600E-only cells. Various ETS-factors were broadly expressed, however, only ETS1 expression and phosphorylation were consistently downregulated following BRAF-inhibition. Knock-down experiments and ChIP corroborated the notion of a functional role for ETS1 and, accordingly, all double-mutant tumor cells were highly sensitive towards the ETS-factor inhibitor YK-4-279. In conclusion, our data suggest that concomitant BRAFV600E and TERT promoter mutations synergistically support cancer cell proliferation and immortalization. ETS1 links these two driver alterations functionally and may represent a promising therapeutic target in this aggressive glioma subgroup.Entities:
Keywords: BRAF; Brain tumor; ETS-factors; ETS1; Glioma; TERT promoter
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31391125 PMCID: PMC6685154 DOI: 10.1186/s40478-019-0775-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol Commun ISSN: 2051-5960 Impact factor: 7.801
Histopathological and molecular characteristics of the cell models
| Histology | CDKN2A expression | Additional genetic aberrations | Stable cell line | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BTL1333 | GBM* | wt | wt | neg | pos |
| yes |
| BTL53 | GBM | wt | wt | pos | pos |
| yes |
| BTL2176 | GBM | wt | C228T | pos | neg |
| yes |
| NMC-G1 | GBM | pos | C228T (homozygous) | pos | neg |
| yes |
| DBTRG-05MG | GBM | pos | C228T | pos | neg |
| yes |
| AM38 | GBM | pos | C250T | pos | neg |
| yes |
| VBT92 | aPXA+ | pos | C228T | pos | neg |
| yes |
| VBT125 | GSo | pos | C228T | pos | neg |
| yes |
| BTL1304 | GS | pos | C228T | pos | neg |
| yes |
| BTL2231 | PXA# | pos | wt | neg | neg | – | no |
| VBT150 | PXA | pos | wt | neg | pos | n.a. | no |
| VBT172 | aPXA | pos | wt | neg | pos | n.a | no |
* GBM = glioblastoma multiforme
+aPXA = anaplastic pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma
oGS = gliosarcoma
#PXA = pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma
pos positive, neg negative, wt wild-type, mut mutated, n.a. not analyzed
Fig. 1Expression patterns of TERT, ETS-factors and activation of associated signaling cascades. a mRNA expression of ETS-factors and the ETS-downstream targets cyclin D1 and TERT were analyzed in the indicated genotypes. Means of three independent experiments are shown. Cyclin D1 mRNA expression of BRAF wild-type versus BRAF mutated cell lines was quantified by unpaired student’s t-test (*p < 0.05). b Western blot analyses of cell lines with different BRAF and TERT promoter status as indicated are depicted. Proteins of S6 and MAPK pathway as well as selected ETS-factors and downstream targets are shown. Ratios between phosphorylated and total proteins as indicated were calculated after normalization to β-actin. wt = wild-type, mut = mutated
Fig. 2Anti-proliferative effects and altered downstream-signaling upon BRAF-inhibition. a Clone formation assays of with different BRAF and TERT promoter status as indicated are shown. Cells were seeded at low density and treated with 1 μM dabrafenib for 7 days. The upper panel depicts one representative well per condition. The lower panel shows the quantitative results represented as mean +/− SD of the respective untreated control. ***p < 0.001 (unpaired student’s t-tests) (b) Western blot analyses of cell models with different BRAF and TERT promoter status are depicted. Cell models were treated with 1 μM dabrafenib for 6 h. Expression and phosphorylation of the indicated MAPK pathway mediators as well as cyclin D1 are shown. Fold values are given as normalized expression to β-actin followed by activated kinase/total kinase and are normalized to the respective control. wt = wild-type, mut = mutated, dabra = dabrafenib
Fig. 3Regulation of TERT expression and TERT promoter activity upon BRAF-inhibition. a TERT mRNA expression following dabrafenib treatment (1 μM, 16 h) of the indicated cell models is shown. Mean +/− SD; unpaired student’s t-tests (b) Luciferase reporter assays were performed in cell lines with different BRAF and TERT promoter status as indicated using wild-type or mutated (C228T) TERT promoter sequences. Cells were treated with 1 μM dabrafenib for 16 h. Results are given as ratio of firefly to renilla luciferase (internal control) and were normalized to a promoter-less construct (−Co, set to 1). Values are given as mean +/− SD from duplicates. One representative experiment out of three, delivering comparable results, is shown. Tukey’s multi-comparison one-way ANOVA was applied for statistical analysis. *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001; wt = wild-type, mut = mutated, n.d. = not detected, dab = dabrafenib
Fig. 4Regulation of ETS-factors by oncogenic BRAF signaling. a mRNA and (b) protein expression/phosphorylation levels of ETS1/GABPA upon 16 h at 1 μM (qRT-PCR) and 6 h at 1 μM (Western blot) dabrafenib treatment. Fold values are given as normalized expression to β-actin and subsequent calculation of the ratio phospho/total ETS1 and are normalized to the respective untreated controls. mRNA expression levels of (c) GABPA, (d) GABPB-1S, (e) GABPB-1 L, and (f) GABPB-2 are depicted for the indicated cell models upon dabrafenib treatment (1 μM, 16 h). *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001 (unpaired students’ t-tests); All values are given as mean +/− SD; wt = wild-type, mut = mutated, dabra = dabrafenib
Fig. 5Activation of the mutant TERT promoter by ETS1. a An siRNA approach was applied to ETS1 knock-down in cell models with different BRAF and TERT promoter status as indicated. TERT mRNA expression was detected using qRT-PCR. Significance levels were evaluated by unpaired students’ t-tests (mean +/− SEM). b Binding of ETS1 and GABPA to the different TERT promoter variants and presence of the activating histone mark H3K27-Ac was analyzed by ChIP-qRT-PCR. IgG served as negative control. Values are given as % Input, depicted mean +/− SD from duplicates. c Cytotoxicity assay were performed in cell models of different BRAF and TERT promoter background as depicted. Half-maximal inhibitory concentration (IC50) after YK-4-279 treatment for 72 h was calculated. Tukey’s multi-comparison one-way ANOVA was applied (mean +/− SD). d TERT and ETS1 mRNA expression levels were analyzed by qRT-PCR after 16 h treatment with the indicated concentrations of YK-4-279. Ordinary one-way ANOVAs for every cell line were calculated (Dunnet correction, 0.05 (95% confidence interval) as controls vs. treatments (mean +/− SEM). *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001, wt = wild-type, mut = mutated, n.d. = not detected