Back to Search Start Over

PRC2-Inactivating Mutations in Cancer Enhance Cytotoxic Response to DNMT1-Targeted Therapy via Enhanced Viral Mimicry

Authors :
Amish J. Patel
Sarah Warda
Jesper L.V. Maag
Rohan Misra
Miguel A. Miranda-Román
Mohini R. Pachai
Cindy J. Lee
Dan Li
Naitao Wang
Gabriella Bayshtok
Eve Fishinevich
Yinuo Meng
Elissa W.P. Wong
Juan Yan
Emily Giff
Melissa B. Pappalardi
Michael T. McCabe
Jonathan A. Fletcher
Charles M. Rudin
Sarat Chandarlapaty
Joseph M. Scandura
Richard P. Koche
Jacob L. Glass
Cristina R. Antonescu
Deyou Zheng
Yu Chen
Ping Chi
Source :
Cancer discovery. 12(9)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2) has oncogenic and tumor-suppressive roles in cancer. There is clinical success of targeting this complex in PRC2-dependent cancers, but an unmet therapeutic need exists in PRC2-loss cancer. PRC2-inactivating mutations are a hallmark feature of high-grade malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor (MPNST), an aggressive sarcoma with poor prognosis and no effective targeted therapy. Through RNAi screening in MPNST, we found that PRC2 inactivation increases sensitivity to genetic or small-molecule inhibition of DNA methyltransferase 1 (DNMT1), which results in enhanced cytotoxicity and antitumor response. Mechanistically, PRC2 inactivation amplifies DNMT inhibitor–mediated expression of retrotransposons, subsequent viral mimicry response, and robust cell death in part through a protein kinase R (PKR)–dependent double-stranded RNA sensor. Collectively, our observations posit DNA methylation as a safeguard against antitumorigenic cell-fate decisions in PRC2-loss cancer to promote cancer pathogenesis, which can be therapeutically exploited by DNMT1-targeted therapy. Significance: PRC2 inactivation drives oncogenesis in various cancers, but therapeutically targeting PRC2 loss has remained challenging. Here we show that PRC2-inactivating mutations set up a tumor context–specific liability for therapeutic intervention via DNMT1 inhibitors, which leads to innate immune signaling mediated by sensing of derepressed retrotransposons and accompanied by enhanced cytotoxicity. See related commentary by Guil and Esteller, p. 2020. This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 2007

Details

ISSN :
21598290
Volume :
12
Issue :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer discovery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d58f48af1634a87c2e9712cc582c46c6