Alimova Irina, Wang Dong, DeSisto John, Danis Etienne, Lakshmanachetty Senthilnath, Prince Eric, Murdock Gillian, Pierce Angela, Donson Andrew, Balakrishnan Ilango, Serkova Natalie, Lin Hening, Foreman Nicholas K, Dahl Nathan, Venkataraman Sujatha, Vibhakar Rajeev
Department of Pediatrics and Section of Pediatric Hematology/Oncology/Bone Marrow Transplant Research Laboratories University of Colorado Denver, Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, Colorado.
The Morgan Adams Foundation Pediatric Brain Tumor Research Program, Children's Hospital Colorado, Aurora, Colorado.
Mol Cancer Res. 2025 Jun 3;23(6):515-529. doi: 10.1158/1541-7786.MCR-24-0926.
An atypical teratoid rhabdoid tumor (ATRT) is a highly aggressive pediatric brain tumor driven by the loss of SMARCB1, which results in epigenetic dysregulation of the genome. SMARCB1 loss affects lineage commitment and differentiation by controlling gene expression. We hypothesized that additional epigenetic factors cooperate with SMARCB1 loss to control cell self-renewal and drive ATRT. We performed an unbiased epigenome-targeted screen to identify genes that cooperate with SMARCB1 and identified SIRT2 as a key regulator. Using in vitro pluripotency assays combined with in vivo single-cell RNA transcriptomics, we examined the impact of SIRT2 on differentiation of ATRT cells. We used a series of orthotopic murine models treated with SIRT2 inhibitors to examine the impact on survival and clinical applicability. We found that ATRT cells are highly dependent on SIRT2 for survival. Genetic or chemical inhibition led to decreased cell self-renewal and induction of differentiation in tumor spheres and in vivo models. We found that SIRT2 inhibition can restore gene expression programs lost because of SMARCB1 loss and reverse the differentiation block in ATRT in vivo. Finally, we showed the in vivo efficacy of a clinically relevant inhibitor demonstrating SIRT2 inhibition as a potential therapeutic strategy. We concluded that SIRT2 is a critical dependency in SMARCB1-deficient ATRT cells and acts by controlling the pluripotency-differentiation switch. Thus, SIRT2 inhibition is a promising therapeutic approach that warrants further investigation and clinical development.
SIRT2 inhibition is a molecular vulnerability in SMARCB1-deleted tumors.
非典型畸胎样横纹肌样瘤(ATRT)是一种侵袭性很强的儿童脑肿瘤,由SMARCB1缺失驱动,这会导致基因组的表观遗传失调。SMARCB1缺失通过控制基因表达影响谱系定向和分化。我们假设其他表观遗传因素与SMARCB1缺失协同作用来控制细胞自我更新并驱动ATRT。我们进行了一项无偏向的表观基因组靶向筛选,以鉴定与SMARCB1协同作用的基因,并确定SIRT2为关键调节因子。使用体外多能性测定结合体内单细胞RNA转录组学,我们研究了SIRT2对ATRT细胞分化的影响。我们使用了一系列用SIRT2抑制剂处理的原位小鼠模型,以研究其对生存和临床适用性的影响。我们发现ATRT细胞的存活高度依赖SIRT2。基因或化学抑制导致肿瘤球和体内模型中的细胞自我更新减少以及分化诱导。我们发现SIRT2抑制可以恢复因SMARCB1缺失而丧失的基因表达程序,并在体内逆转ATRT中的分化阻滞。最后,我们展示了一种临床相关抑制剂的体内疗效,证明SIRT2抑制是一种潜在的治疗策略。我们得出结论,SIRT2是SMARCB1缺陷型ATRT细胞中的关键依赖性因子,并通过控制多能性-分化开关发挥作用。因此,SIRT2抑制是一种有前景的治疗方法,值得进一步研究和临床开发。
SIRT2抑制是SMARCB1缺失肿瘤中的一种分子脆弱性。