by
Jason R Healy;
Lori S Hart;
Alexander L Shazad;
Maria E Gagliardi;
Matthew Tsang;
Jimmy Elias;
Jacob Ruden;
Alvin Farrel;
Jo Lynne Rokita;
Yimei Li;
Anastasia Wyce;
Olena Barbash;
Vandana Batra;
Minu Samanta;
John M Maris;
Robert Schnepp
Background: The treatment of high-risk neuroblastoma continues to present a formidable challenge to pediatric oncology. Previous studies have shown that Bromodomain and extraterminal (BET) inhibitors can inhibit MYCN expression and suppress MYCN-amplified neuroblastoma in vivo. Furthermore, alterations within RAS-MAPK (mitogen-activated protein kinase) signaling play significant roles in neuroblastoma initiation, maintenance, and relapse, and mitogen-activated extracellular signal-regulated kinase (MEK) inhibitors demonstrate efficacy in subsets of neuroblastoma preclinical models. Finally, hyperactivation of RAS-MAPK signaling has been shown to promote resistance to BET inhibitors. Therefore, we examined the antitumor efficacy of combined BET/MEK inhibition utilizing I-BET726 or I-BET762 and trametinib in high-risk neuroblastoma. Procedure: Utilizing a panel of genomically annotated neuroblastoma cell line models, we investigated the in vitro effects of combined BET/MEK inhibition on cell proliferation and apoptosis. Furthermore, we evaluated the effects of combined inhibition in neuroblastoma xenograft models. Results: Combined BET and MEK inhibition demonstrated synergistic effects on the growth and survival of a large panel of neuroblastoma cell lines through augmentation of apoptosis. A combination therapy slowed tumor growth in a non-MYCN–amplified, NRAS-mutated neuroblastoma xenograft model, but had no efficacy in an MYCN-amplified model harboring a loss-of-function mutation in NF1. Conclusions: Combinatorial BET and MEK inhibition was synergistic in the vast majority of neuroblastoma cell lines in the in vitro setting but showed limited antitumor activity in vivo. Collectively, these data do not support clinical development of this combination in high-risk neuroblastoma.
by
Robert Schnepp;
Karmella Haynes;
CE Shields;
S Potlapalli;
SM Cuya-Smith;
SK Chappell;
D Chen;
D Martinez;
J Pogoriler;
KS Rathi;
SA Patel;
KM Oristian;
CM Linardic;
JM Maris
Rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) is an aggressive pediatric soft tissue sarcoma. There are two main subtypes of RMS, alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma (ARMS) and embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma. ARMS typically encompasses fusion-positive rhabdomyosarcoma, which expresses either PAX3-FOXO1 or PAX7-FOXO1 fusion proteins. There are no targeted therapies for ARMS; however, recent studies have begun to illustrate the cooperation between epigenetic proteins and the PAX3-FOXO1 fusion, indicating that epigenetic proteins may serve as targets in ARMS. Here, we investigate the contribution of BMI1, given the established role of this epigenetic regulator in sustaining aggression in cancer. We determined that BMI1 is expressed across ARMS tumors, patient-derived xenografts, and cell lines. We depleted BMI1 using RNAi and inhibitors (PTC-209 and PTC-028) and found that this leads to a decrease in cell growth/increase in apoptosis in vitro, and delays tumor growth in vivo. Our data suggest that BMI1 inhibition activates the Hippo pathway via phosphorylation of LATS1/2 and subsequent reduction in YAP levels and YAP/TAZ target genes. These results identify BMI1 as a potential therapeutic vulnerability in ARMS and warrant further investigation of BMI1 in ARMS and other sarcomas.
Neuroblastoma, a pediatric cancer of the developing neural crest, is a strikingly heterogeneous disease, with clinical presentations ranging from the child with an asymptomatic abdominal mass to the patient presenting in extremis due to respiratory compromise [1]. At diagnosis, patients with high-risk disease generally have a primary (often abdominal) mass, as well as metastases in various sites, including the liver, bone marrow, cortical bone, and lymph nodes. Conceptually, most studies have focused on defining the biology and deregulated oncogenic signaling that promote growth of the primary tumor. In comparison, the mechanistic and molecular underpinnings of metastatic disease are less thoroughly explored.
by
Dongdong Chen;
Julie Cox;
Jayabhargav Annam;
Melanie Weingart;
Grace Essien;
Komal S. Rathi;
Jo Lynne Rokita;
Priya Khurana;
Selma M. Cuya;
Kristopher R. Bosse;
Adeiye Pilgrim;
Daisy Li;
Cara Shields;
Oskar Laur;
John M. Maris;
Robert Schnepp
Neuroblastoma is an aggressive pediatric malignancy of the neural crest with suboptimal cure rates and a striking predilection for widespread metastases, underscoring the need to identify novel therapeutic vulnerabilities. We recently identified the RNA binding protein LIN28B as a driver in high-risk neuroblastoma and demonstrated it promotes oncogenic cell proliferation by coordinating a RAN-Aurora kinase A network. Here, we demonstrate that LIN28B influences another key hallmark of cancer, metastatic dissemination. Using a murine xenograft model of neuroblastoma dissemination, we show that LIN28B promotes metastasis. We demonstrate that this is in part due to the effects of LIN28B on self-renewal and migration, providing an understanding of how LIN28B shapes the metastatic phenotype. Our studies reveal that the let-7 family, which LIN28B inhibits, decreases self-renewal and migration. Next, we identify PDZ Binding Kinase (PBK) as a novel LIN28B target. PBK is a serine/threonine kinase that promotes the proliferation and self-renewal of neural stem cells and serves as an oncogenic driver in multiple aggressive malignancies. We demonstrate that PBK is both a novel direct target of let-7i and that MYCN regulates PBK expression, thus elucidating two oncogenic drivers that converge on PBK. Functionally, PBK promotes self-renewal and migration, phenocopying LIN28B. Taken together, our findings define a role for LIN28B in neuroblastoma metastasis and define the targetable kinase PBK as a potential novel vulnerability in metastatic neuroblastoma.