Targeting mutant dicer tumorigenesis in pleuropulmonary blastoma via inhibition of RNA polymerase I

Megan Rui En Wong, Kia Hui Lim, Esther Xuan Yi Hee, Huiyi Chen, Chik Hong Kuick, Sze Jet Aw, Kenneth Tou En Chang, Nurfarhanah Syed Sulaiman, Sharon YY Low, Septian Hartono, Anh Nguyen Tuan Tran, Summaiyya Hanum Ahamed, Ching Mei Joyce Lam, Shui Yen Soh, Katherine M. Hannan, Ross D. Hannan, Lucy A. Coupland, Amos Hong Pheng Loh*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

DICER1 mutations predispose to increased risk for various cancers, particularly pleuropulmonary blastoma (PPB), the commonest lung malignancy of childhood. There is a paucity of directly actionable molecular targets as these tumors are driven by loss-of-function mutations of DICER1. Therapeutic development for PPB is further limited by a lack of biologically and physiologically-representative disease models. Given recent evidence of Dicer's role as a haploinsufficient tumor suppressor regulating RNA polymerase I (Pol I), Pol I inhibition could abrogate mutant Dicer-mediated accumulation of stalled polymerases to trigger apoptosis. Hence, we developed a novel subpleural orthotopic PPB patient-derived xenograft (PDX) model that retained both RNase IIIa and IIIb hotspot mutations and recapitulated the cardiorespiratory physiology of intra-thoracic disease, and with it evaluated the tolerability and efficacy of first-in-class Pol I inhibitor CX-5461. In PDX tumors, CX-5461 significantly reduced H3K9 di-methylation and increased nuclear p53 expression, within 24 hours’ exposure. Following treatment at the maximum tolerated dosing regimen (12 doses, 30 mg/kg), tumors were smaller and less hemorrhagic than controls, with significantly decreased cellular proliferation, and increased apoptosis. As demonstrated in a novel intrathoracic tumor model of PPB, Pol I inhibition with CX-5461 could be a tolerable and clinically-feasible therapeutic strategy for mutant Dicer tumors, inducing antitumor effects by decreasing H3K9 methylation and enhancing p53-mediated apoptosis.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)60-71
Number of pages12
JournalTranslational Research
Volume258
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Aug 2023

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