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result(s) for
"Martínez-Iniesta, María"
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Epigenetic inactivation of the p53-induced long noncoding RNA TP53 target 1 in human cancer
2016
Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) are important regulators of cellular homeostasis. However, their contribution to the cancer phenotype still needs to be established. Herein, we have identified a p53-induced lncRNA, TP53TG1, that undergoes cancer-specific promoter hypermethylation-associated silencing. In vitro and in vivo assays identify a tumor-suppressor activity for TP53TG1 and a role in the p53 response to DNA damage. Importantly, we show that TP53TG1 binds to the multifaceted DNA/RNA binding protein YBX1 to prevent its nuclear localization and thus the YBX1-mediated activation of oncogenes. TP53TG1 epigenetic inactivation in cancer cells releases the transcriptional repression of YBX1-targeted growth-promoting genes and creates a chemoresistant tumor. TP53TG1 hypermethylation in primary tumors is shown to be associated with poor outcome. The epigenetic loss of TP53TG1 therefore represents an altered event in an lncRNA that is linked to classical tumoral pathways, such as p53 signaling, but is also connected to regulatory networks of the cancer cell.
Journal Article
RAS-ON inhibition overcomes clinical resistance to KRAS G12C-OFF covalent blockade
2024
Selective KRAS
G12C
inhibitors have been developed to covalently lock the oncogene in the inactive GDP-bound state. Two of these molecules, sotorasib and adagrasib, are approved for the treatment of adult patients with KRAS
G12C
-mutated previously treated advanced non-small cell lung cancer. Drug treatment imposes selective pressures leading to the outgrowth of drug-resistant variants. Mass sequencing from patients’ biopsies identified a number of acquired
KRAS
mutations -both in
cis
and in
trans
- in resistant tumors. We demonstrate here that disease progression in vivo can also occur due to adaptive mechanisms and increased KRAS-GTP loading. Using the preclinical tool tri-complex KRAS
G12C
-selective covalent inhibitor, RMC-4998 (also known as RM-029), that targets the active GTP-bound (ON) state of the oncogene, we provide a proof-of-concept that the clinical stage KRAS
G12C
(ON) inhibitor RMC-6291 alone or in combination with KRAS
G12C
(OFF) drugs can be an alternative potential therapeutic strategy to circumvent resistance due to increased KRAS-GTP loading.
KRAS G12C mutant selective inhibitors targeting inactive state have been approved for use in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Here, using models derived from a patient with NSCLC who progressed on sotorasib (KRAS G12C inhibitor), the authors identify increased KRAS GTP loading as an adaptive resistance mechanism which could be targeted with KRAS G12C inhibitors selective to the GTP active state.
Journal Article
p53 wild-type colorectal cancer cells that express a fetal gene signature are associated with metastasis and poor prognosis
2022
Current therapy against colorectal cancer (CRC) is based on DNA-damaging agents that remain ineffective in a proportion of patients. Whether and how non-curative DNA damage-based treatment affects tumor cell behavior and patient outcome is primarily unstudied. Using CRC patient-derived organoids (PDO)s, we show that sublethal doses of chemotherapy (CT) does not select previously resistant tumor populations but induces a quiescent state specifically to
TP53
wildtype (WT) cancer cells, which is linked to the acquisition of a YAP1-dependent fetal phenotype. Cells displaying this phenotype exhibit high tumor-initiating and metastatic activity. Nuclear YAP1 and fetal traits are present in a proportion of tumors at diagnosis and predict poor prognosis in patients carrying
TP53
WT CRC tumors. We provide data indicating the higher efficacy of CT together with YAP1 inhibitors for eradication of therapy resistant
TP53
WT cancer cells. Together these results identify fetal conversion as a useful biomarker for patient prognosis and therapy prescription.
The failure of chemotherapy in colorectal cancer is currently unclear. Here, the authors show that upon sub-lethal dose of chemotherapy wild-type p53 colorectal cancers acquire a quiescence-like phenotype and a YAP-dependent fetal-like intestinal stem cell state associated with a higher metastatic activity and poor prognosis in patients.
Journal Article
Epigenetic loss of RNA-methyltransferase NSUN5 in glioma targets ribosomes to drive a stress adaptive translational program
by
Arias, Alexandra
,
Vidal, August
,
Cuartas, Isabel
in
Brain tumors
,
DNA methylation
,
Epigenetics
2019
Tumors have aberrant proteomes that often do not match their corresponding transcriptome profiles. One possible cause of this discrepancy is the existence of aberrant RNA modification landscapes in the so-called epitranscriptome. Here, we report that human glioma cells undergo DNA methylation-associated epigenetic silencing of NSUN5, a candidate RNA methyltransferase for 5-methylcytosine. In this setting, NSUN5 exhibits tumor-suppressor characteristics in vivo glioma models. We also found that NSUN5 loss generates an unmethylated status at the C3782 position of 28S rRNA that drives an overall depletion of protein synthesis, and leads to the emergence of an adaptive translational program for survival under conditions of cellular stress. Interestingly, NSUN5 epigenetic inactivation also renders these gliomas sensitive to bioactivatable substrates of the stress-related enzyme NQO1. Most importantly, NSUN5 epigenetic inactivation is a hallmark of glioma patients with long-term survival for this otherwise devastating disease.
Journal Article
Use of patient derived orthotopic xenograft models for real-time therapy guidance in a pediatric sporadic malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor
2020
Background:
The aim of this study was to test the feasibility and utility of developing patient-derived orthotopic xenograft (PDOX) models for patients with malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors (MPNSTs) to aid therapeutic interventions in real time.
Patient & Methods:
A sporadic relapsed MPNST developed in a 14-year-old boy was engrafted in mice, generating a PDOX model for use in co-clinical trials after informed consent. SNP-array and exome sequencing was performed on the relapsed tumor. Genomics, drug availability, and published literature guided PDOX treatments.
Results:
A MPNST PDOX model was generated and expanded. Analysis of the patient’s relapsed tumor revealed mutations in the MAPK1, EED, and CDK2NA/B genes. First, the PDOX model was treated with the same therapeutic regimen as received by the patient (everolimus and trametinib); after observing partial response, tumors were left to regrow. Regrown tumors were treated based on mutations (palbociclib and JQ1), drug availability, and published literature (nab-paclitaxel; bevacizumab; sorafenib plus doxorubicin; and gemcitabine plus docetaxel). The patient had a lung metastatic relapse and was treated according to PDOX results, first with nab-paclitaxel, second with sorafenib plus doxorubicin after progression, although a complete response was not achieved and multiple metastasectomies were performed. The patient is currently disease free 46 months after first relapse.
Conclusion:
Our results indicate the feasibility of generating MPNST-PDOX and genomic characterization to guide treatment in real time. Although the treatment responses observed in our model did not fully recapitulate the patient’s response, this pilot study identify key aspects to improve our co-clinical testing approach in real time.
Journal Article
Epigenetic activation of a cryptic TBC1D16 transcript enhances melanoma progression by targeting EGFR
2015
Epigenetic inactivation of a Rab GTPase activating protein confers metastatic properties in melanoma, and it correlates with poor prognosis but better sensitivity to therapy by targeting EGFR signaling.
Metastasis is responsible for most cancer-related deaths, and, among common tumor types, melanoma is one with great potential to metastasize. Here we study the contribution of epigenetic changes to the dissemination process by analyzing the changes that occur at the DNA methylation level between primary cancer cells and metastases. We found a hypomethylation event that reactivates a cryptic transcript of the Rab GTPase activating protein TBC1D16 (TBC1D16-47 kDa; referred to hereafter as TBC1D16-47KD) to be a characteristic feature of the metastatic cascade. This short isoform of TBC1D16 exacerbates melanoma growth and metastasis both
in vitro
and
in vivo
. By combining immunoprecipitation and mass spectrometry, we identified RAB5C as a new TBC1D16 target and showed that it regulates EGFR in melanoma cells. We also found that epigenetic reactivation of TBC1D16-47KD is associated with poor clinical outcome in melanoma, while conferring greater sensitivity to BRAF and MEK inhibitors.
Journal Article
Efficacy of CDK4/6 inhibitors in preclinical models of malignant pleural mesothelioma
2021
Background
There is no effective therapy for patients with malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) who progressed to platinum-based chemotherapy and immunotherapy.
Methods
We aimed to investigate the antitumor activity of CDK4/6 inhibitors using in vitro and in vivo preclinical models of MPM.
Results
Based on publicly available transcriptomic data of MPM, patients with
CDK4
or
CDK6
overexpression had shorter overall survival. Treatment with abemaciclib or palbociclib at 100 nM significantly decreased cell proliferation in all cell models evaluated. Both CDK4/6 inhibitors significantly induced G1 cell cycle arrest, thereby increasing cell senescence and increased the expression of interferon signalling pathway and tumour antigen presentation process in culture models of MPM. In vivo preclinical studies showed that palbociclib significantly reduced tumour growth and prolonged overall survival using distinct xenograft models of MPM implanted in athymic mice.
Conclusions
Treatment of MPM with CDK4/6 inhibitors decreased cell proliferation, mainly by promoting cell cycle arrest at G1 and by induction of cell senescence. Our preclinical studies provide evidence for evaluating CDK4/6 inhibitors in the clinic for the treatment of MPM.
Journal Article
Tumor xenograft modeling identifies an association between TCF4 loss and breast cancer chemoresistance
by
Díaz-Navarro, Ander
,
Lázaro, Conxi
,
Ruiz de Garibay, Gorka
in
Adaptation
,
Breast cancer
,
Cancer chemotherapy
2018
Understanding the mechanisms of cancer therapeutic resistance is fundamental to improving cancer care. There is clear benefit from chemotherapy in different breast cancer settings; however, knowledge of the mutations and genes that mediate resistance is incomplete. In this study, by modeling chemoresistance in patient-derived xenografts (PDXs), we show that adaptation to therapy is genetically complex and identify that loss of transcription factor 4 (TCF4; also known as ITF2) is associated with this process. A triple-negative
-mutated PDX was used to study the genetics of chemoresistance. The PDX was treated in parallel with four chemotherapies for five iterative cycles. Exome sequencing identified few genes with
or enriched mutations in common among the different therapies, whereas many common depleted mutations/genes were observed. Analysis of somatic mutations from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) supported the prognostic relevance of the identified genes. A mutation in
was found
in all treatments, and analysis of drug sensitivity profiles across cancer cell lines supported the link to chemoresistance. Loss of TCF4 conferred chemoresistance in breast cancer cell models, possibly by altering cell cycle regulation. Targeted sequencing in chemoresistant tumors identified an intronic variant of
that may represent an expression quantitative trait locus associated with relapse outcome in TCGA. Immunohistochemical studies suggest a common loss of nuclear TCF4 expression post-chemotherapy. Together, these results from tumor xenograft modeling depict a link between altered TCF4 expression and breast cancer chemoresistance.
Journal Article
The transcribed pseudogene RPSAP52 enhances the oncofetal HMGA2-IGF2BP2-RAS axis through LIN28B-dependent and independent let-7 inhibition
2019
One largely unknown question in cell biology is the discrimination between inconsequential and functional transcriptional events with relevant regulatory functions. Here, we find that the oncofetal
HMGA2
gene is aberrantly reexpressed in many tumor types together with its antisense transcribed pseudogene
RPSAP52
.
RPSAP52
is abundantly present in the cytoplasm, where it interacts with the RNA binding protein IGF2BP2/IMP2, facilitating its binding to mRNA targets, promoting their translation by mediating their recruitment on polysomes and enhancing proliferative and self-renewal pathways. Notably, downregulation of
RPSAP52
impairs the balance between the oncogene
LIN28B
and the tumor suppressor
let-7
family of miRNAs, inhibits cellular proliferation and migration in vitro and slows down tumor growth in vivo. In addition, high levels of
RPSAP52
in patient samples associate with a worse prognosis in sarcomas. Overall, we reveal the roles of a transcribed pseudogene that may display properties of an oncofetal master regulator in human cancers.
RPSAP52
is an antisense-transcribed pseudogene of
HMGA2
that positively regulates
HMGA2
expression. Here, the authors show that reexpression of
RPSAP52
promotes tumorigenicity by facilitating IGF2BP2 binding to its mRNA targets and consequently regulates the balance of LIN28B and
let-7
levels.
Journal Article
Combination of chemotherapy with BRAF inhibitors results in effective eradication of malignant melanoma by preventing ATM-dependent DNA repair
2021
Invasive malignant melanoma (MM) is an aggressive tumor with no curative therapy in advanced stages. Chemotherapy has not demonstrated its efficacy in MM and current treatment for tumors carrying the most frequent BRAFV600E mutation consists of BRAF inhibitors alone or in combination with MAPK pathway inhibitors. We previously found that BRAF inhibition prevents activation of the DNA-damage repair (DDR) pathway in colorectal cancer thus potentiating the effect of chemotherapy. We now show that different chemotherapy agents inflict DNA damage in MM cells, which is efficiently repaired, associated with activation of the ATM-dependent DDR machinery. Pharmacologic inhibition of BRAF impairs ATM and DDR activation in these cells, leading to sustained DNA damage. Combination treatments involving DNA-damaging agents and BRAF inhibitors increase tumor cell death in vitro and in vivo, and impede MM regrowth after treatment cessation. We propose to reconsider the use of chemotherapy in combination with BRAF inhibitors for MM treatment.
Journal Article