Back to Search Start Over

Data from ZFTA–RELA Dictates Oncogenic Transcriptional Programs to Drive Aggressive Supratentorial Ependymoma

Authors :
Stephen C. Mack
Benjamin Deneen
Kelsey C. Bertrand
Claudia L. Kleinman
Nada Jabado
Joanna Yi
Richard J. Gilbertson
Sameer Agnihotri
Kristian W. Pajtler
Donald W. Parsons
Susan M. Blaney
Murali M. Chintagumpala
Thomas F. Westbrook
Irtisha Singh
H. Courtney Hodges
Charles Y. Lin
Stefan M. Pfister
Daisuke Kawauchi
Felix Sahm
Luz A. De León
Peter R. Wang
Madeline Ngo
Sarah G. Injac
Baoli Hu
Robert Kupp
Kathleen Kong
Kristen L. Karlin
Calla Olson
Yuen San Chan
Ann-Catherine J. Stanton
Brian J. Golbourn
Dana Tlais
Alisha Kardian
Minerva Solis
Austin J. Stuckert
Bryan Rivas
Selin Jessa
Hsiao-Chi Chen
Srinidhi Varadharajan
Yanhua Zhao
Amir Arabzade
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

More than 60% of supratentorial ependymomas harbor a ZFTA–RELA (ZRfus) gene fusion (formerly C11orf95–RELA). To study the biology of ZRfus, we developed an autochthonous mouse tumor model using in utero electroporation (IUE) of the embryonic mouse brain. Integrative epigenomic and transcriptomic mapping was performed on IUE-driven ZRfus tumors by CUT&RUN, chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing, assay for transposase-accessible chromatin sequencing, and RNA sequencing and compared with human ZRfus-driven ependymoma. In addition to direct canonical NFκB pathway activation, ZRfus dictates a neoplastic transcriptional program and binds to thousands of unique sites across the genome that are enriched with PLAGL family transcription factor (TF) motifs. ZRfus activates gene expression programs through recruitment of transcriptional coactivators (Brd4, Ep300, Cbp, Pol2) that are amenable to pharmacologic inhibition. Downstream ZRfus target genes converge on developmental programs marked by PLAGL TF proteins, and activate neoplastic programs enriched in Mapk, focal adhesion, and gene imprinting networks.Significance:Ependymomas are aggressive brain tumors. Although drivers of supratentorial ependymoma (ZFTA- and YAP1-associated gene fusions) have been discovered, their functions remain unclear. Our study investigates the biology of ZFTA–RELA-driven ependymoma, specifically mechanisms of transcriptional deregulation and direct downstream gene networks that may be leveraged for potential therapeutic testing.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 2113

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........4e3a974b88b13a244bee5e4ff38026e0