학술논문

SMARCA4 biology in alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma
Document Type
article
Source
Oncogene. 41(11)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Oncology and Carcinogenesis
Cancer
Rare Diseases
Pediatric Research Initiative
Genetics
Pediatric Cancer
Orphan Drug
Pediatric
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Biology
Child
DNA Helicases
Humans
Neoplasms
Nuclear Proteins
Rhabdomyosarcoma
Alveolar
Rhabdomyosarcoma
Embryonal
Transcription Factors
Clinical Sciences
Oncology & Carcinogenesis
Biochemistry and cell biology
Oncology and carcinogenesis
Language
Abstract
Rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) is the most common soft tissue sarcoma in children and phenocopies a muscle precursor that fails to undergo terminal differentiation. The alveolar subtype (ARMS) has the poorest prognosis and represents the greatest unmet medical need for RMS. Emerging evidence supports the role of epigenetic dysregulation in RMS. Here we show that SMARCA4/BRG1, an ATP-dependent chromatin remodeling enzyme of the SWI/SNF complex, is prominently expressed in primary tumors from ARMS patients and cell cultures. Our validation studies for a CRISPR screen of 400 epigenetic targets identified SMARCA4 as a unique factor for long-term (but not short-term) tumor cell survival in ARMS. A SMARCA4/SMARCA2 protein degrader (ACBI-1) demonstrated similar long-term tumor cell dependence in vitro and in vivo. These results credential SMARCA4 as a tumor cell dependency factor and a therapeutic target in ARMS.