| Literature DB >> 33941852 |
Marek Wanior1,2, Andreas Krämer1,2,3, Stefan Knapp4,5,6,7, Andreas C Joerger8,9,10.
Abstract
Multi-subunit ATPase-dependent chromatin remodelling complexes SWI/SNF (switch/sucrose non-fermentable) are fundamental epigenetic regulators of gene transcription. Functional genomic studies revealed a remarkable mutation prevalence of SWI/SNF-encoding genes in 20-25% of all human cancers, frequently driving oncogenic programmes. Some SWI/SNF-mutant cancers are hypersensitive to perturbations in other SWI/SNF subunits, regulatory proteins and distinct biological pathways, often resulting in sustained anticancer effects and synthetic lethal interactions. Exploiting these vulnerabilities is a promising therapeutic strategy. Here, we review the importance of SWI/SNF chromatin remodellers in gene regulation as well as mechanisms leading to assembly defects and their role in cancer development. We will focus in particular on emerging strategies for the targeted therapy of SWI/SNF-deficient cancers using chemical probes, including proteolysis targeting chimeras, to induce synthetic lethality.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33941852 PMCID: PMC8154588 DOI: 10.1038/s41388-021-01781-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncogene ISSN: 0950-9232 Impact factor: 8.756
Fig. 1Subunit composition and assembly of mammalian SWI/SNF chromatin remodelling complexes BAF, PBAF and ncBAF.
Illustration based on the cryo EM structures of nucleosome-bound BAF and the latest data on SWI/SNF complex assembly [16–18]. Nucleosomes are bound via DNA- and histone-binding domains. Shared SWI/SNF subunits are coloured in grey, BAF subunits not found in ncBAF in orange, PBAF-specific subunits in green and ncBAF-specific subunits in blue.
Binding interactions/functions of SWI/SNF subunits and their role in cancer.
| Complex | SWI/SNF subunits ( | Domainsa | Chromatin interaction | SWI/SNF-associated cancer |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BAF/PBAF/ncBAF | BRG1 ( | ATPase, helicase, bromodomain BRK, HSA, QLQ, SnAC [ | DNA binding, histone binding | Breast cancer, cutaneous cancer, B-cell lymphoma, bladder carcinoma, non-small cell lung cancer, melanoma, glioma carcinoma, |
| BRM ( | ATPase, helicase, bromodomain, BRK, HSA, QLQ, SnAC | DNA binding, histone binding | Ovarian small cell carcinoma, sarcoma, lung adenocarcinoma, hepatocellular carcinoma | |
| BAF53A ( | Actin-like | Not reported | Squamous cell carcinoma, rhabdomyosarcoma | |
| SS18* ( | No domain annotation | Not reported | Synovial sarcoma, Ewing sarcoma | |
| β-actin ( | Armadillo repeats | Not reported | Abnormal expression and polymerisation of ACTB in most cancers leading to changes of the cytoskeleton associated with invasiveness and metastasis [ | |
| BAF155 ( | Chromodomain, SWIRM, SANT | Histone binding | Rhabdoid cancer, small cell lung caner | |
| BAF170§ ( | Chromodomain, SWIRM, SANT | Histone binding | Gastric cancer, colorectal cancer, rhabdoid cancer, pancreatic cancer | |
| BCL7 (A, B or C) ( | Conserved N-terminal domain | Not reported | Multiple myeloma, non-Hodgkin lymphoma | |
| BAF60 (A, B§ or C#) ( | SWIB | Not reported | Lung cancer, gastric cancer | |
| BAF57§ ( | HMG box | DNA binding | Breast cancer, endometrial carcinoma, ovarian carcinoma, meningioma | |
| BAF47§ ( | Winged helix DNA-binding domain [ | DNA binding, nucleosome acidic patch binding | Malignant rhabdoid tumour, prostate cancer, renal medullary carcinoma, epithelioid sarcoma, familial schwannomatosis | |
| BAF | BAF250 (A or B) ( | ARID (AT-rich interactive domain) | DNA binding | Ovarian clear cell carcinoma, uterine endometrial cancer, neuroblastoma, colorectal cancer |
| BAF45 (B, C or D) ( | Zinc finger/PHD finger | Histone binding | Colorectal cancer | |
| PBAF | BAF200 ( | ARID, RFX winged helix DBD, zinc finger | DNA binding | Melanoma, non-small cell lung cancer, hepatocellular carcinoma, colorectal carcinoma |
| BRD7 ( | Bromodomain, DUF3512 | Histone binding | Hepatocellular carcinoma, nasopharyngeal carcinoma, lung cancer, ovarian carcinoma | |
| BAF180 ( | Bromodomain, BAH domain, HMG box | DNA binding, histone binding | Clear cell renal cell carcinoma | |
| BAF45A ( | PHD finger | Histone binding | Gastric cancer | |
| ncBAF | BRD9 ( | Bromodomain, DUF3512 | Histone binding | Nut midline carcinoma, rhabdoid cancer |
| GLTSCR1 ( | No annotation | Not reported, BRD4 interactor | Glioma tumour, prostate cancer | |
| GLTSCR1L ( | No annotation | Not reported, BRD4 interactor | Prostate cancer |
aSelected domains annotated in UniProt or the indicated reference. *Found only in BAF and ncBAF. §Found only in BAF and PBAF. #Found only in BAF.
Fig. 2Cryo-EM structure of human BAF in complex with nucleosome core particle.
Individual subunits are shown in different colours (PDB entry 6LTJ) [17]. ARID1A serves as the core of the base module stabilising the entire complex, while SMARCA4 and SMARCB1 bind the nucleosome. The insert shows the ATPase domain of SMARCA4 in complex with an allosteric ATPase inhibitor (PDB entry 6EG3) [74].
Synthetic lethal interactions and chemical tools for the targeted therapy of SWI/SNF-mutant cancers.
| SWI/SNF-deficiency | Synthetic lethal interaction/ epigenetic antagonism | Inhibitors | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| SMARCA4 | SMARCA2 | PFI-3#, ACBI1#, ATPase-14# | [ |
| ACTB | n/a | [ | |
| ARID2 | n/a | [ | |
| CDK4/6 | Palbociclib§, Abemaciclib§, Ribociclib§ | [ | |
| Aurora A | Tozasertib* (VX-680) | [ | |
| OxPhos | IACS-010759* | [ | |
| BET | ( + )-JQ1#, OTX-015* | [ | |
| EZH2 | Tazemetostat§, GSK126*, CPI-169# | [ | |
| ARID1A | ARID1B | n/a | [ |
| EZH2 | GSK126* | [ | |
| PARP | Talazoparib§, Olaparib§, Rucaparib§, Veliparib§ | [ | |
| PI3K/AKT | MK-2206*, Perifosine*, Buparlisib* | [ | |
| ATR | VE-821#, VX-970 (M6620)* | [ | |
| Abl, Src, c-KIT | Dasatinib§ | [ | |
| GCLC | Buthionine sulfoximine* | [ | |
| Aurora A | TCS-7010# | [ | |
| HDAC6 | Ricolinostat (ACY-1215)* | [ | |
| SMARCC1 | SMARCC2 | n/a | [ |
| SMARCA2 | SMARCA4 | dBRD9# | [ |
| PBRM1 | EZH2 | GSK126* | [ |
| ARID2 | PARP | Veliparib§ | [ |
| SMARCB1 | EZH2 | Tazemetostat§ | [ |
| HDAC | Panobinostat§ | [ | |
| BRD9 | BI-7273#/9564#, dBRD9#, VZ185# | [ | |
| MDM2/4 | Idasanutlin* | [ | |
| UBE2C | Ixazomib§, bortezomib§ | [ | |
| SS18-SSX | BRD9 | dBRD9# | [ |
| KDM2B | n/a | [ | |
| ATR | VX-970*, AZD6738* | [ |
#Chemical probe. *Clinical probe. §FDA-approved drug.
Fig. 3Druggable binding pockets of SWI/SNF chromatin remodelling complex bromodomains with selected chemical probes.
A, B Comparison of BRD4 in complex with (+)-JQ1 (PDB entry 3MXF) [82] and BRD9 in complex with BI-7273 (PDB entry 5EU1) [80] reveals a different shape of the binding pocket. The residue numbering in the BRD9 structure is based on the canonical isoform in UniProt entry Q9H8M2, which differs from the numbering in the original PDB entry that is based on an isoform lacking the first 116 residues. C–E Crystal structures of BRD subfamily VIII members with bound inhibitors (PDB entries 5DKD, 6ZS4, 6ZNV) reveal a similar overall inhibitor binding mode [90, 93]. F Crystal structure of the ternary complex of SMARCA4 and the E3 ubiquitin ligase VHL bound to PROTAC ACBI1, showing that the complex is stabilised by additional protein–protein interactions (PDB entry 6HR2) [104].
Fig. 4Selection of small molecules targeting the SWI/SNF bromodomains and the ATPase domain.
A Inhibitors and PROTACs targeting bromodomains BRD7/9 [80, 86–89, 102, 103]. B Inhibitors and PROTACs targeting the bromodomains of SMARCA2/4 and PBRM1 [90–95, 104]. C Allosteric inhibitor of the ATPase domain of SMARCA2/4 [74].
Fig. 5Overview of synthetic lethal interactions in SWI/SNF-mutant cancers with chemical tools for targeted cancer therapy.
Known synthetic lethal interactions in SWI/SNF-mutant cancers are shown in matching colours. In addition, the SWI/SNF-polycomb (PCR2/EZH2) epigenetic antagonism pathway is highlighted. Available chemical tools for each target involved in a synthetic lethal interaction in SWI/SNF-mutant cancers are listed. The red arrows highlight synthetic lethal interactions with other SWI/SNF chromatin remodelling complex subunits, whereas the black arrows mark reported vulnerabilities with other genes.