Cargando…

LGG-17. Preventing recurrence: targeting molecular mechanisms driving tumor growth rebound after MAPKi withdrawal in pediatric low-grade glioma

Pediatric low-grade gliomas, a diverse group of WHO grade 1 and 2 glial or glioneural tumors, comprise the most common category of primary brain tumors in children. The majority of these tumors are driven by alterations in the MAPK pathway, making them in principle susceptible to MAPKi therapy. Whil...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kocher, Daniela, Selt, Florian, Valinciute, Gintvile, Zaman, Julia, Vonhören, David, Pusch, Stefan, Guiho, Romain, Martinez-Barbera, Juan Pedro, von Deimling, Andreas, Pfister, Stefan M, Jones, David T W, Brummer, Tilman, Witt, Olaf, Milde, Till, Sigaud, Romain
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9164816/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/neuonc/noac079.332
_version_ 1784720231592099840
author Kocher, Daniela
Selt, Florian
Valinciute, Gintvile
Zaman, Julia
Vonhören, David
Pusch, Stefan
Guiho, Romain
Martinez-Barbera, Juan Pedro
von Deimling, Andreas
Pfister, Stefan M
Jones, David T W
Brummer, Tilman
Witt, Olaf
Milde, Till
Sigaud, Romain
author_facet Kocher, Daniela
Selt, Florian
Valinciute, Gintvile
Zaman, Julia
Vonhören, David
Pusch, Stefan
Guiho, Romain
Martinez-Barbera, Juan Pedro
von Deimling, Andreas
Pfister, Stefan M
Jones, David T W
Brummer, Tilman
Witt, Olaf
Milde, Till
Sigaud, Romain
author_sort Kocher, Daniela
collection PubMed
description Pediatric low-grade gliomas, a diverse group of WHO grade 1 and 2 glial or glioneural tumors, comprise the most common category of primary brain tumors in children. The majority of these tumors are driven by alterations in the MAPK pathway, making them in principle susceptible to MAPKi therapy. While patients often benefit from MAPKi during treatment, tumor rebound may occur once treatment is stopped, constituting a significant clinical challenge. BT-40, patient-derived cells with molecular features of pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma (BRAF(V600E), CDKN2Adel), were used to model the rebound growth in vitro, based on viable cell counts in response to treatment and withdrawal of the clinically relevant BRAF(V600E) specific inhibitor dabrafenib. Standard-of-care chemotherapy (vincristine and carboplatin) was used as a reference. MAPK pathway reactivation upon withdrawal was assessed by WB and qPCR analysis. Based on the observed cell-regrowth and MAPK-reactivation pattern, key-timepoints during withdrawal were identified, which are currently being further analyzed through RNAseq and phospho-/proteomics. BT-40 cells started to proliferate again two days after dabrafenib withdrawal, and earliest five days after chemotherapy withdrawal. MAPK pathway activity, based on Mek and Erk phosphorylation, reached baseline levels three hours after dabrafenib withdrawal, this was associated with 2.5-fold increased c-Fos gene expression two hours after withdrawal. The earlier cell regrowth after dabrafenib withdrawal compared to chemotherapy withdrawal matches clinical observations, making the model suitable to study the rebound. The observed MAPK overactivation suggests the growth rebound might not only be caused by a fast reactivation of the pathway but also by other mechanisms, e.g. accumulation of upstream activators due to loss of negative feedback or parallel pathways. To investigate this, key-timepoints during treatment withdrawal will be analyzed using a multi-omics approach. Based on these findings, possible rebound-driving mechanisms will be identified and further validated using BT-40 and additional PXA models in vitro and in vivo.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9164816
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-91648162022-06-05 LGG-17. Preventing recurrence: targeting molecular mechanisms driving tumor growth rebound after MAPKi withdrawal in pediatric low-grade glioma Kocher, Daniela Selt, Florian Valinciute, Gintvile Zaman, Julia Vonhören, David Pusch, Stefan Guiho, Romain Martinez-Barbera, Juan Pedro von Deimling, Andreas Pfister, Stefan M Jones, David T W Brummer, Tilman Witt, Olaf Milde, Till Sigaud, Romain Neuro Oncol Low Grade Glioma Pediatric low-grade gliomas, a diverse group of WHO grade 1 and 2 glial or glioneural tumors, comprise the most common category of primary brain tumors in children. The majority of these tumors are driven by alterations in the MAPK pathway, making them in principle susceptible to MAPKi therapy. While patients often benefit from MAPKi during treatment, tumor rebound may occur once treatment is stopped, constituting a significant clinical challenge. BT-40, patient-derived cells with molecular features of pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma (BRAF(V600E), CDKN2Adel), were used to model the rebound growth in vitro, based on viable cell counts in response to treatment and withdrawal of the clinically relevant BRAF(V600E) specific inhibitor dabrafenib. Standard-of-care chemotherapy (vincristine and carboplatin) was used as a reference. MAPK pathway reactivation upon withdrawal was assessed by WB and qPCR analysis. Based on the observed cell-regrowth and MAPK-reactivation pattern, key-timepoints during withdrawal were identified, which are currently being further analyzed through RNAseq and phospho-/proteomics. BT-40 cells started to proliferate again two days after dabrafenib withdrawal, and earliest five days after chemotherapy withdrawal. MAPK pathway activity, based on Mek and Erk phosphorylation, reached baseline levels three hours after dabrafenib withdrawal, this was associated with 2.5-fold increased c-Fos gene expression two hours after withdrawal. The earlier cell regrowth after dabrafenib withdrawal compared to chemotherapy withdrawal matches clinical observations, making the model suitable to study the rebound. The observed MAPK overactivation suggests the growth rebound might not only be caused by a fast reactivation of the pathway but also by other mechanisms, e.g. accumulation of upstream activators due to loss of negative feedback or parallel pathways. To investigate this, key-timepoints during treatment withdrawal will be analyzed using a multi-omics approach. Based on these findings, possible rebound-driving mechanisms will be identified and further validated using BT-40 and additional PXA models in vitro and in vivo. Oxford University Press 2022-06-03 /pmc/articles/PMC9164816/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/neuonc/noac079.332 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Neuro-Oncology. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Low Grade Glioma
Kocher, Daniela
Selt, Florian
Valinciute, Gintvile
Zaman, Julia
Vonhören, David
Pusch, Stefan
Guiho, Romain
Martinez-Barbera, Juan Pedro
von Deimling, Andreas
Pfister, Stefan M
Jones, David T W
Brummer, Tilman
Witt, Olaf
Milde, Till
Sigaud, Romain
LGG-17. Preventing recurrence: targeting molecular mechanisms driving tumor growth rebound after MAPKi withdrawal in pediatric low-grade glioma
title LGG-17. Preventing recurrence: targeting molecular mechanisms driving tumor growth rebound after MAPKi withdrawal in pediatric low-grade glioma
title_full LGG-17. Preventing recurrence: targeting molecular mechanisms driving tumor growth rebound after MAPKi withdrawal in pediatric low-grade glioma
title_fullStr LGG-17. Preventing recurrence: targeting molecular mechanisms driving tumor growth rebound after MAPKi withdrawal in pediatric low-grade glioma
title_full_unstemmed LGG-17. Preventing recurrence: targeting molecular mechanisms driving tumor growth rebound after MAPKi withdrawal in pediatric low-grade glioma
title_short LGG-17. Preventing recurrence: targeting molecular mechanisms driving tumor growth rebound after MAPKi withdrawal in pediatric low-grade glioma
title_sort lgg-17. preventing recurrence: targeting molecular mechanisms driving tumor growth rebound after mapki withdrawal in pediatric low-grade glioma
topic Low Grade Glioma
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9164816/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/neuonc/noac079.332
work_keys_str_mv AT kocherdaniela lgg17preventingrecurrencetargetingmolecularmechanismsdrivingtumorgrowthreboundaftermapkiwithdrawalinpediatriclowgradeglioma
AT seltflorian lgg17preventingrecurrencetargetingmolecularmechanismsdrivingtumorgrowthreboundaftermapkiwithdrawalinpediatriclowgradeglioma
AT valinciutegintvile lgg17preventingrecurrencetargetingmolecularmechanismsdrivingtumorgrowthreboundaftermapkiwithdrawalinpediatriclowgradeglioma
AT zamanjulia lgg17preventingrecurrencetargetingmolecularmechanismsdrivingtumorgrowthreboundaftermapkiwithdrawalinpediatriclowgradeglioma
AT vonhorendavid lgg17preventingrecurrencetargetingmolecularmechanismsdrivingtumorgrowthreboundaftermapkiwithdrawalinpediatriclowgradeglioma
AT puschstefan lgg17preventingrecurrencetargetingmolecularmechanismsdrivingtumorgrowthreboundaftermapkiwithdrawalinpediatriclowgradeglioma
AT guihoromain lgg17preventingrecurrencetargetingmolecularmechanismsdrivingtumorgrowthreboundaftermapkiwithdrawalinpediatriclowgradeglioma
AT martinezbarberajuanpedro lgg17preventingrecurrencetargetingmolecularmechanismsdrivingtumorgrowthreboundaftermapkiwithdrawalinpediatriclowgradeglioma
AT vondeimlingandreas lgg17preventingrecurrencetargetingmolecularmechanismsdrivingtumorgrowthreboundaftermapkiwithdrawalinpediatriclowgradeglioma
AT pfisterstefanm lgg17preventingrecurrencetargetingmolecularmechanismsdrivingtumorgrowthreboundaftermapkiwithdrawalinpediatriclowgradeglioma
AT jonesdavidtw lgg17preventingrecurrencetargetingmolecularmechanismsdrivingtumorgrowthreboundaftermapkiwithdrawalinpediatriclowgradeglioma
AT brummertilman lgg17preventingrecurrencetargetingmolecularmechanismsdrivingtumorgrowthreboundaftermapkiwithdrawalinpediatriclowgradeglioma
AT wittolaf lgg17preventingrecurrencetargetingmolecularmechanismsdrivingtumorgrowthreboundaftermapkiwithdrawalinpediatriclowgradeglioma
AT mildetill lgg17preventingrecurrencetargetingmolecularmechanismsdrivingtumorgrowthreboundaftermapkiwithdrawalinpediatriclowgradeglioma
AT sigaudromain lgg17preventingrecurrencetargetingmolecularmechanismsdrivingtumorgrowthreboundaftermapkiwithdrawalinpediatriclowgradeglioma