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Changing paradigms in oncology: Toward noncytotoxic treatments for advanced gliomas

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER
Volume 151, Issue 9, Pages 1431-1446

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ijc.34131

Keywords

cancer epigenetics; epigenetic; glioma; glioma therapy; neurooncology

Categories

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [445704496]
  2. National Cancer Institute [P30 CA043703, R21 CA263430, RO1 CA204373]
  3. National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute [PO1 HL146372]

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Glioma cells often have mutated or deleted p53 and/or p16/CDKN2A, affecting the effectiveness of apoptosis-based treatments. However, the master transcription factors in glioma cells, which are responsible for specifying and driving glial lineage fates, still remain active. Disrupted epigenetic regulation and amplified repressing mechanisms contribute to malignant self-replication in gliomas. Inhibiting the repressive epigenetic enzymes can activate late-glial genes and stop the self-replication process, providing potential targets for noncytotoxic therapy.
Glial-lineage malignancies (gliomas) recurrently mutate and/or delete the master regulators of apoptosis p53 and/or p16/CDKN2A, undermining apoptosis-intending (cytotoxic) treatments. By contrast to disrupted p53/p16, glioma cells are live-wired with the master transcription factor circuits that specify and drive glial lineage fates: these transcription factors activate early-glial and replication programs as expected, but fail in their other usual function of forcing onward glial lineage-maturation-late-glial genes have constitutively closed chromatin requiring chromatin-remodeling for activation-glioma-genesis disrupts several epigenetic components needed to perform this work, and simultaneously amplifies repressing epigenetic machinery instead. Pharmacologic inhibition of repressing epigenetic enzymes thus allows activation of late-glial genes and terminates glioma self-replication (self-replication = replication without lineage-maturation), independent of p53/p16/apoptosis. Lineage-specifying master transcription factors therefore contrast with p53/p16 in being enriched in self-replicating glioma cells, reveal a cause-effect relationship between aberrant epigenetic repression of late-lineage programs and malignant self-replication, and point to specific epigenetic targets for noncytotoxic glioma-therapy.

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