DIPG-40. TARGETING MASTER REGULATOR DEPENDENCIES IN DIFFUSE INTRINSIC PONTINE GLIOMA (DIPG)

Autor: Chankrit Sethi, Stergios Zacharoulis, Chris Jones, Andrea Califano, Jovana Pavisic
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2020
Předmět:
Zdroj: Neuro-Oncology
ISSN: 1523-5866
1522-8517
Popis: Diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG) remains a fatal disease with no effective drugs to date. Mutation-based precision oncology approaches are limited by lack of targetable mutations and genetic heterogeneity. We leveraged systems biology methodologies to discover common targetable disease drivers—master regulator proteins (MRs)—in DIPG to expand treatment options. Using the metaVIPER algorithm, we interrogated an integrated low grade glioma and GBM gene regulatory network with 31 DIPG-gene expression signatures to identify tumor-specific MRs by differential expression of their transcriptional targets. Unsupervised clustering identified MR signatures of upregulated activity in RRM2/TOP2A in 13 patients, CD3D in 5 patients, and MMP7, TACSTD2, RAC2 and SLC15A1/SLC34A2 in individual patients, all of which can be targeted. Notably, intratumoral administration of etoposide by convection enhanced delivery was effective in murine proneural gliomas in which TOP2 was identified as a MR while RRM2—targetable by drugs such as cladribine—has been shown to be a positive regulator of glioma progression whose knock-down inhibits tumor growth. We also prioritized drugs by their ability to reverse MR-activity signatures using a large drug-perturbation database. Patients clustered by predicted drug sensitivities with distinct groups of tumors predicted to respond to proteasome inhibitors, Thiotepa or Volasertib all of which have early evidence in treating gliomas. We will refine this analysis in a multi-institutional study of >100 patient gene expression profiles to define MR signatures driving known biological/molecular disease subtypes, use DIPG cell lines recapitulating common MR architectures to optimize therapy prioritization, and validate our findings in vivo.
Databáze: OpenAIRE