AI Article Synopsis

  • Genomic sequencing helps doctors find the best cancer treatments, but for some brain tumors called ependymomas, the causes are still unclear and there aren’t good treatment options.
  • Ependymomas are tough to treat, especially the more aggressive type found in young children, called posterior fossa ependymoma group A (PF-EPN-A), which doesn’t have many genetic changes, while another type (PF-EPN-B) shows some genetic changes but tends to respond well to treatment.
  • Researchers studied 42 ependymoma samples to find specific genes and pathways that are important for the tumor cells, which could lead to new treatment strategies that help kill the cancer and improve survival in lab tests.

Article Abstract

Genomic sequencing has driven precision-based oncology therapy; however, the genetic drivers of many malignancies remain unknown or non-targetable, so alternative approaches to the identification of therapeutic leads are necessary. Ependymomas are chemotherapy-resistant brain tumours, which, despite genomic sequencing, lack effective molecular targets. Intracranial ependymomas are segregated on the basis of anatomical location (supratentorial region or posterior fossa) and further divided into distinct molecular subgroups that reflect differences in the age of onset, gender predominance and response to therapy. The most common and aggressive subgroup, posterior fossa ependymoma group A (PF-EPN-A), occurs in young children and appears to lack recurrent somatic mutations. Conversely, posterior fossa ependymoma group B (PF-EPN-B) tumours display frequent large-scale copy number gains and losses but have favourable clinical outcomes. More than 70% of supratentorial ependymomas are defined by highly recurrent gene fusions in the NF-κB subunit gene RELA (ST-EPN-RELA), and a smaller number involve fusion of the gene encoding the transcriptional activator YAP1 (ST-EPN-YAP1). Subependymomas, a distinct histologic variant, can also be found within the supratetorial and posterior fossa compartments, and account for the majority of tumours in the molecular subgroups ST-EPN-SE and PF-EPN-SE. Here we describe mapping of active chromatin landscapes in 42 primary ependymomas in two non-overlapping primary ependymoma cohorts, with the goal of identifying essential super-enhancer-associated genes on which tumour cells depend. Enhancer regions revealed putative oncogenes, molecular targets and pathways; inhibition of these targets with small molecule inhibitors or short hairpin RNA diminished the proliferation of patient-derived neurospheres and increased survival in mouse models of ependymomas. Through profiling of transcriptional enhancers, our study provides a framework for target and drug discovery in other cancers that lack known genetic drivers and are therefore difficult to treat.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5993422PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature25169DOI Listing

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