4.7 Article

A Role for SMARCB1 in Synovial Sarcomagenesis Reveals That SS18-SSX Induces Canonical BAF Destruction

Journal

CANCER DISCOVERY
Volume 11, Issue 10, Pages 2620-2637

Publisher

AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/2159-8290.CD-20-1219

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Funding

  1. NCI/NIH [R01CA201396, U54CA231652, 2P30CA042014-31]
  2. Paul Nabil Bustany Fund for Synovial Sarcoma Research
  3. Sarcoma Foundation of America

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Reduced protein levels of SMARCB1 are seen in synovial sarcoma, but it still plays a defining role within specific BAF complexes. This reduction is driven by SS18-SSX-induced degradation of canonical BAF, leading to shifts in the abundance of other BAF-family subtypes over time.
Reduced protein levels of SMARCB1 (also known as BAF47, INI1, SNF5) have long been observed in synovial sarcoma. Here, we show that combined Smarcb1 genetic loss with SS18-SSX expression in mice synergized to produce aggressive tumors with histomorphology, transcriptomes, and genome-wide BAF-family complex distributions distinct from SS18-SSX alone, indicating a defining role for SMARCB1 in synovial sarcoma. Smarcb1 silencing alone in mesenchyme modeled epithelioid sarcomagenesis. In mouse and human synovial sarcoma cells, SMARCB1 was identified within PBAF and canonical BAF (CBAF) complexes, coincorporated with SS18-SSX in the latter. Recombinant expression of CBAF components in human cells reconstituted CBAF subcomplexes that contained equal levels of SMARCB1 regardless of SS18 or SS18-SSX inclusion. In vivo, SS18-SSX expression led to whole-complex CBAF degradation, rendering increases in the relative prevalence of other BAF-family subtypes, PBAF and GBAF complexes, over time. Thus, SS18-SSX alters BAF subtypes levels/balance and genome distribution, driving synovial sarcomagenesis. SIGNIFICANCE: The protein level of BAF component SMARCB1 is reduced in synovial sarcoma but plays a defining role, incorporating into PBAF and SS18-SSX-containing canonical BAF complexes. Reduced levels of SMARCB1 derive from whole-complex degradation of canonical BAF driven by SS18-SSX, with relative increases in the abundance of other BAF-family subtypes.

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