4.6 Article

Bivalent chromatin as a therapeutic target in cancer: An in silico predictive approach for combining epigenetic drugs

Journal

PLOS COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY
Volume 17, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1008408

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. CERCA Programme of the Generalitat de Catalunya
  2. State Research Agency [MTM2015-71509-C2-1-R, MTM2015-71509-C2-2-R, RTI2018-098322-B-I00, PGC2018-098676-B-I00, RTI2018-093860-B-C21, PID2019-10455GB-I00]
  3. AGAUR projects [2014SGR229, 2017SGR1049, 2017SGR01735]
  4. Ramon y Cajal'' Fellowship [RYC-2017-22243]

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Tumour cell heterogeneity poses a major obstacle for targeted anti-cancer therapies, with limited strategies available to mitigate its undesirable impact on clinical outcomes. A computational approach has been developed to design combinatorial therapies against chromatin modifiers, with promising results in circumventing therapeutic challenges posed by tumour heterogeneity. Combinatorial strategies involving modulators of histone H3K4 and H3K27 demethylases are predicted to be more effective in managing non-uniform responses of heterogeneous cancer cell populations.
Tumour cell heterogeneity is a major barrier for efficient design of targeted anti-cancer therapies. A diverse distribution of phenotypically distinct tumour-cell subpopulations prior to drug treatment predisposes to non-uniform responses, leading to the elimination of sensitive cancer cells whilst leaving resistant subpopulations unharmed. Few strategies have been proposed for quantifying the variability associated to individual cancer-cell heterogeneity and minimizing its undesirable impact on clinical outcomes. Here, we report a computational approach that allows the rational design of combinatorial therapies involving epigenetic drugs against chromatin modifiers. We have formulated a stochastic model of a bivalent transcription factor that allows us to characterise three different qualitative behaviours, namely: bistable, high- and low-gene expression. Comparison between analytical results and experimental data determined that the so-called bistable and high-gene expression behaviours can be identified with undifferentiated and differentiated cell types, respectively. Since undifferentiated cells with an aberrant self-renewing potential might exhibit a cancer/metastasis-initiating phenotype, we analysed the efficiency of combining epigenetic drugs against the background of heterogeneity within the bistable sub-ensemble. Whereas single-targeted approaches mostly failed to circumvent the therapeutic problems represented by tumour heterogeneity, combinatorial strategies fared much better. Specifically, the more successful combinations were predicted to involve modulators of the histone H3K4 and H3K27 demethylases KDM5 and KDM6A/UTX. Those strategies involving the H3K4 and H3K27 methyltransferases MLL2 and EZH2, however, were predicted to be less effective. Our theoretical framework provides a coherent basis for the development of an in silico platform capable of identifying the epigenetic drugs combinations best-suited to therapeutically manage non-uniform responses of heterogenous cancer cell populations.

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