4.7 Article

Histone Deacetylase 8 in Neuroblastoma Tumorigenesis

Journal

CLINICAL CANCER RESEARCH
Volume 15, Issue 1, Pages 91-99

Publisher

AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-08-0684

Keywords

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Funding

  1. University of Heidelberg
  2. Federal Ministry of Education and Research [N2KR-S19T03, 01GS0456, 01GS0459]
  3. European Embryonal Tumor Pipeline (European Union) [037260]
  4. Deutsche Krebshilfe [502719, 106847, 70-443, FO-2032-Be7, 102546]
  5. Fordergesellschaft Kinderkrebs-Neuroblastom-Forschung e.V
  6. Research Corporation Cottrell College Science Award [CC5955]

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Purpose: The effects of pan - histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors on cancer cells have shown that HDACs are involved in fundamental tumor biological processes such as cell cycle control, differentiation, and apoptosis. However, because of the unselective nature of these compounds, little is known about the contribution of individual HDAC family members to tumorigenesis and progression. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the role of individual HDACs in neuroblastoma tumorigenesis. Experimental Design: We have investigated the mRNA expression of all HDAC1-11 family members in a large cohort of primary neuroblastoma samples covering the full spectrum of the disease. HDACs associated with disease stage and survival were subsequently functionally evaluated in cell culture models. Results: Only HDAC8 expression was significantly correlated with advanced disease and metastasis and down-regulated in stage 4S neuroblastoma associated with spontaneous regression. High HDAC8 expression was associated with poor prognostic markers and poor overall and event-free survival. The knockdown of HDAC8 resulted in the inhibition of proliferation, reduced clonogenic growth, cell cycle arrest, and differentiation in cultured neuroblastoma cells. The treatment of neuroblastoma cell lines as well as short-term-culture neuroblastoma cells with an HDAC8-selective small-molecule inhibitor inhibited cell proliferation and clone formation, induced differentiation, and thus reproduced the HDAC8 knockdown phenotype. Global histone 4 acetylation was not affected by HDAC8 knockdown or by selective inhibitor treatment. Conclusions: Our data point toward an important role of HDAC8 in neuroblastoma pathogenesis and identify this HDAC family member as a specific drug target for the differentiation therapy of neuroblastoma.

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