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Low-dose Actinomycin-D treatment re-establishes the tumoursuppressive function of P53 in RELA-positive ependymoma

Ependymomas in children can arise throughout all compartments of the central nervous system (CNS). Highly malignant paediatric ependymoma subtypes are Group A tumours of the posterior fossa (PF-EPN-A) and RELA-fusion positive (ST-EPN-RELA) tumours in the supratentorial compartment. It was repeatedly...

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Autores principales: Tzaridis, Theophilos, Milde, Till, Pajtler, Kristian W., Bender, Sebastian, Jones, David T. W., Müller, Simone, Wittmann, Andrea, Schlotter, Magdalena, Kulozik, Andreas E., Lichter, Peter, Collins, V. Peter, Witt, Olaf, Kool, Marcel, Korshunov, Andrey, Pfister, Stefan M., Witt, Hendrik
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5308696/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27556362
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.11452
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author Tzaridis, Theophilos
Milde, Till
Pajtler, Kristian W.
Bender, Sebastian
Jones, David T. W.
Müller, Simone
Wittmann, Andrea
Schlotter, Magdalena
Kulozik, Andreas E.
Lichter, Peter
Collins, V. Peter
Witt, Olaf
Kool, Marcel
Korshunov, Andrey
Pfister, Stefan M.
Witt, Hendrik
author_facet Tzaridis, Theophilos
Milde, Till
Pajtler, Kristian W.
Bender, Sebastian
Jones, David T. W.
Müller, Simone
Wittmann, Andrea
Schlotter, Magdalena
Kulozik, Andreas E.
Lichter, Peter
Collins, V. Peter
Witt, Olaf
Kool, Marcel
Korshunov, Andrey
Pfister, Stefan M.
Witt, Hendrik
author_sort Tzaridis, Theophilos
collection PubMed
description Ependymomas in children can arise throughout all compartments of the central nervous system (CNS). Highly malignant paediatric ependymoma subtypes are Group A tumours of the posterior fossa (PF-EPN-A) and RELA-fusion positive (ST-EPN-RELA) tumours in the supratentorial compartment. It was repeatedly reported in smaller series that accumulation of p53 is frequently observed in ependymomas and that immunohistochemical staining correlates with poor clinical outcome, while TP53 mutations are rare. Our TP53 mutation analysis of 130 primary ependymomas identified a mutation rate of only 3%. Immunohistochemical analysis of 398 ependymomas confirmed previous results correlating the accumulation of p53 with inferior outcome. Among the p53-positive ependymomas, the vast majority exhibited a RELA fusion leading to the hypothesis that p53 inactivation might be linked to RELA positivity. In order to assess the potential of p53 reactivation through MDM2 inhibition in ependymoma, we evaluated the effects of Actinomycin-D and Nutlin-3 treatment in two preclinical ependymoma models representing the high-risk subtypes PF-EPN-A and ST-EPN-RELA. The IC-50 of the agent as determined by metabolic activity assays was in the lower nano-molar range (0.2–0.7 nM). Transcriptome analyses of high-dose (100 nM), low-dose (5 nM) and non-treated cells revealed re-expression of p53 dependent genes including p53 upregulated modulator of apoptosis (PUMA) after low-dose treatment. At the protein level, we validated the Actinomycin-D induced upregulation of PUMA, and of p53 interaction partners MDM2 and p21. Proapoptotic effects of low-dose application of the agent were confirmed by flow cytometry. Thus, Actinomycin-D could constitute a promising therapeutic option for ST-EPN-RELA ependymoma patients, whose tumours frequently exhibit p53 inactivation.
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spelling pubmed-53086962017-03-09 Low-dose Actinomycin-D treatment re-establishes the tumoursuppressive function of P53 in RELA-positive ependymoma Tzaridis, Theophilos Milde, Till Pajtler, Kristian W. Bender, Sebastian Jones, David T. W. Müller, Simone Wittmann, Andrea Schlotter, Magdalena Kulozik, Andreas E. Lichter, Peter Collins, V. Peter Witt, Olaf Kool, Marcel Korshunov, Andrey Pfister, Stefan M. Witt, Hendrik Oncotarget Research Paper Ependymomas in children can arise throughout all compartments of the central nervous system (CNS). Highly malignant paediatric ependymoma subtypes are Group A tumours of the posterior fossa (PF-EPN-A) and RELA-fusion positive (ST-EPN-RELA) tumours in the supratentorial compartment. It was repeatedly reported in smaller series that accumulation of p53 is frequently observed in ependymomas and that immunohistochemical staining correlates with poor clinical outcome, while TP53 mutations are rare. Our TP53 mutation analysis of 130 primary ependymomas identified a mutation rate of only 3%. Immunohistochemical analysis of 398 ependymomas confirmed previous results correlating the accumulation of p53 with inferior outcome. Among the p53-positive ependymomas, the vast majority exhibited a RELA fusion leading to the hypothesis that p53 inactivation might be linked to RELA positivity. In order to assess the potential of p53 reactivation through MDM2 inhibition in ependymoma, we evaluated the effects of Actinomycin-D and Nutlin-3 treatment in two preclinical ependymoma models representing the high-risk subtypes PF-EPN-A and ST-EPN-RELA. The IC-50 of the agent as determined by metabolic activity assays was in the lower nano-molar range (0.2–0.7 nM). Transcriptome analyses of high-dose (100 nM), low-dose (5 nM) and non-treated cells revealed re-expression of p53 dependent genes including p53 upregulated modulator of apoptosis (PUMA) after low-dose treatment. At the protein level, we validated the Actinomycin-D induced upregulation of PUMA, and of p53 interaction partners MDM2 and p21. Proapoptotic effects of low-dose application of the agent were confirmed by flow cytometry. Thus, Actinomycin-D could constitute a promising therapeutic option for ST-EPN-RELA ependymoma patients, whose tumours frequently exhibit p53 inactivation. Impact Journals LLC 2016-08-20 /pmc/articles/PMC5308696/ /pubmed/27556362 http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.11452 Text en Copyright: © 2016 Tzaridis et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Tzaridis, Theophilos
Milde, Till
Pajtler, Kristian W.
Bender, Sebastian
Jones, David T. W.
Müller, Simone
Wittmann, Andrea
Schlotter, Magdalena
Kulozik, Andreas E.
Lichter, Peter
Collins, V. Peter
Witt, Olaf
Kool, Marcel
Korshunov, Andrey
Pfister, Stefan M.
Witt, Hendrik
Low-dose Actinomycin-D treatment re-establishes the tumoursuppressive function of P53 in RELA-positive ependymoma
title Low-dose Actinomycin-D treatment re-establishes the tumoursuppressive function of P53 in RELA-positive ependymoma
title_full Low-dose Actinomycin-D treatment re-establishes the tumoursuppressive function of P53 in RELA-positive ependymoma
title_fullStr Low-dose Actinomycin-D treatment re-establishes the tumoursuppressive function of P53 in RELA-positive ependymoma
title_full_unstemmed Low-dose Actinomycin-D treatment re-establishes the tumoursuppressive function of P53 in RELA-positive ependymoma
title_short Low-dose Actinomycin-D treatment re-establishes the tumoursuppressive function of P53 in RELA-positive ependymoma
title_sort low-dose actinomycin-d treatment re-establishes the tumoursuppressive function of p53 in rela-positive ependymoma
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5308696/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27556362
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.11452
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