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2.
Cancer Res ; 82(3): 484-496, 2022 02 01.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34853072

RÉSUMÉ

Cancer therapy frequently fails due to the emergence of resistance. Many tumors include phenotypically immature tumor cells, which have been implicated in therapy resistance. Neuroblastoma cells can adopt a lineage-committed adrenergic (ADRN) or an immature mesenchymal (MES) state. They differ in epigenetic landscape and transcription factors, and MES cells are more resistant to chemotherapy. Here we analyzed the response of MES cells to targeted drugs. Activating anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) mutations are frequently found in neuroblastoma and ALK inhibitors (ALKi) are in clinical trials. ALKi treatment of ADRN neuroblastoma cells with a tumor-driving ALK mutation induced cell death. Conversely, MES cells did not express either mutant or wild-type ALK and were resistant to ALKi, and MES cells formed tumors that progressed under ALKi therapy. In assessing the role of MES cells in relapse development, TRAIL was identified to specifically induce apoptosis in MES cells and to suppress MES tumor growth. Addition of TRAIL to ALKi treatment of neuroblastoma xenografts delayed relapses in a subset of the animals, suggesting a role for MES cells in relapse formation. While ADRN cells resembled normal embryonal neuroblasts, MES cells resembled immature precursor cells, which also lacked ALK expression. Resistance to targeted drugs can therefore be an intrinsic property of immature cancer cells based on their resemblance to developmental precursors. SIGNIFICANCE: In neuroblastoma, mesenchymal tumor cells lack expression of the tumor-driving ALK oncogene and are resistant to ALKi, but dual treatment with ALKi and mesenchymal cell-targeting TRAIL delays tumor relapse.


Sujet(s)
Kinase du lymphome anaplasique/antagonistes et inhibiteurs , Neuroblastome/génétique , Lignée cellulaire tumorale , Humains , Neuroblastome/anatomopathologie
3.
Nat Commun ; 10(1): 1530, 2019 04 04.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30948783

RÉSUMÉ

Transition between differentiation states in development occurs swift but the mechanisms leading to epigenetic and transcriptional reprogramming are poorly understood. The pediatric cancer neuroblastoma includes adrenergic (ADRN) and mesenchymal (MES) tumor cell types, which differ in phenotype, super-enhancers (SEs) and core regulatory circuitries. These cell types can spontaneously interconvert, but the mechanism remains largely unknown. Here, we unravel how a NOTCH3 intracellular domain reprogrammed the ADRN transcriptional landscape towards a MES state. A transcriptional feed-forward circuitry of NOTCH-family transcription factors amplifies the NOTCH signaling levels, explaining the swift transition between two semi-stable cellular states. This transition induces genome-wide remodeling of the H3K27ac landscape and a switch from ADRN SEs to MES SEs. Once established, the NOTCH feed-forward loop maintains the induced MES state. In vivo reprogramming of ADRN cells shows that MES and ADRN cells are equally oncogenic. Our results elucidate a swift transdifferentiation between two semi-stable epigenetic cellular states.


Sujet(s)
Neurones adrénergiques/anatomopathologie , Reprogrammation cellulaire/génétique , Cellules souches mésenchymateuses/anatomopathologie , Neuroblastome/anatomopathologie , Récepteur Notch3/physiologie , Neurones adrénergiques/métabolisme , Lignée cellulaire tumorale , Épigenèse génétique , Rétrocontrôle physiologique , Analyse de profil d'expression de gènes , Régulation de l'expression des gènes tumoraux , Humains , Cellules souches mésenchymateuses/métabolisme , Neuroblastome/métabolisme , Récepteur Notch3/génétique , Récepteur Notch3/métabolisme
4.
Nat Genet ; 49(8): 1261-1266, 2017 Aug.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28650485

RÉSUMÉ

Neuroblastoma and other pediatric tumors show a paucity of gene mutations, which has sparked an interest in their epigenetic regulation. Several tumor types include phenotypically divergent cells, resembling cells from different lineage development stages. It has been proposed that super-enhancer-associated transcription factor (TF) networks underlie lineage identity, but the role of these enhancers in intratumoral heterogeneity is unknown. Here we show that most neuroblastomas include two types of tumor cells with divergent gene expression profiles. Undifferentiated mesenchymal cells and committed adrenergic cells can interconvert and resemble cells from different lineage differentiation stages. ChIP-seq analysis of isogenic pairs of mesenchymal and adrenergic cells identified a distinct super-enhancer landscape and super-enhancer-associated TF network for each cell type. Expression of the mesenchymal TF PRRX1 could reprogram the super-enhancer and mRNA landscapes of adrenergic cells toward a mesenchymal state. Mesenchymal cells were more chemoresistant in vitro and were enriched in post-therapy and relapse tumors. Two super-enhancer-associated TF networks, which probably mediate lineage control in normal development, thus dominate epigenetic control of neuroblastoma and shape intratumoral heterogeneity.


Sujet(s)
Différenciation cellulaire/génétique , Épigenèse génétique , Neuroblastome/génétique , Neuroblastome/anatomopathologie , Antigène AC133/génétique , Neurones adrénergiques/cytologie , Lignée cellulaire tumorale , Lignage cellulaire , Protéines à homéodomaine/génétique , Humains , Mésoderme/cytologie , Facteurs de transcription/métabolisme , Transcriptome
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