3.9 Article

High-Throughput Screening of Epigenetic Inhibitors in Meningiomas Identifies HDAC, G9a, and Jumonji-Domain Inhibition as Potential Therapies

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGICAL SURGERY PART B-SKULL BASE
Volume 84, Issue 5, Pages 452-462

Publisher

THIEME MEDICAL PUBL INC
DOI: 10.1055/a-1885-1257

Keywords

meningioma; screening; HDAC; G9a; Jumonji domain

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Epigenetics may be more accurate than histopathology in predicting treatment sensitivity and clinical course for patients with meningiomas. In this study, the researchers investigated the efficacy of targeting epigenetic mechanisms for treating meningiomas and found that epigenetic inhibition could be a potential therapeutic development for these tumors.
Background Epigenetics may predict treatment sensitivity and clinical course for patients with meningiomas more accurately than histopathology. Nonetheless, targeting epigenetic mechanisms is understudied for pharmacotherapeutic development for these tumors. The bio-molecular insights and potential therapeutic development of meningioma epigenetics led us to investigate epigenetic inhibition in meningiomas. Methods We screened a 43-tumor cohort using a 139-compound epigenetic inhibitor library to assess sensitivity of relevant meningioma subgroups to epigenetic inhibition. The cohort was composed of 5 cell lines and 38 tumors cultured directly from surgery; mean patient age was 56.6 years +/- 13.9 standard deviation. Tumor categories: 38 primary tumors, 5 recurrent; 33 from females, 10 from males; 32 = grade 1; 10 = grade 2; 1 = grade 3. Results Consistent with our previous results, histone deacetylase inhibitors (HDACi) were the most efficacious class. Panobinostat significantly reduced cell viability in 36 of 43 tumors; 41 tumors had significant sensitivity to some HDACi. G9a inhibition and Jumonji-domain inhibition also significantly reduced cell viability across the cohort; tumors that lost sensitivity to panobinostat maintained sensitivity to either G9a or Jumonji-domain inhibition. Sensitivity to G9a and HDAC inhibition increased with tumor grade; tumor responses did not separate by gender. Few differences were found between recurrent and primary tumors, or between those with prior radiation versus those without. Conclusions Few efforts have investigated the efficacy of targeting epigenetic mechanisms to treat meningiomas, making the clinical utility of epigenetic inhibition largely unknown. Our results suggest that epigenetic inhibition is a targetable area for meningioma pharmacotherapy.

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