Login / Signup

β-catenin-driven differentiation is a tissue-specific epigenetic vulnerability in adrenal cancer.

Dipika R MohanKleiton Silva BorgesIsabella FincoChristopher R LaPenseeJuilee RegeApril L SolonDonald W LittleTobias ElseMadson Queiroz AlmeidaDerek DangJames Haggerty-SkeansApril A ApfelbaumMichelle VincoAlda WakamatsuBeatriz M P MarianiLarissa Costa AmorimAna Claudia L XavierBerenice Bilharinho de MendoncaMaria Claudia Nogueira ZerbiniElizabeth R LawlorRyoma OhiRichard J AuchusWilliam E RaineySuely Kazue Nagahashi MarieThomas J GiordanoSriram VennetiMaria Candida Barisson Villares FragosoDavid T BreaultAntonio Marcondes LerarioGary D Hammer
Published in: Cancer research (2023)
Adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) is a rare cancer in which tissue-specific differentiation is paradoxically associated with dismal outcomes. The differentiated ACC subtype CIMP-high is prevalent, incurable, and routinely fatal. CIMP-high ACC possess abnormal DNA methylation and frequent β-catenin activating mutations. Here, we demonstrated that ACC differentiation is maintained by a balance between nuclear, tissue-specific β-catenin-containing complexes and the epigenome. On chromatin, β-catenin bound master adrenal transcription factor SF1 and hijacked the adrenocortical super-enhancer landscape to maintain differentiation in CIMP-high ACC; off chromatin, β-catenin bound histone methyltransferase EZH2. SF1/β-catenin and EZH2/β-catenin complexes present in normal adrenals persisted through all phases of ACC evolution. Pharmacologic EZH2 inhibition in CIMP-high ACC expelled SF1/β-catenin from chromatin and favored EZH2/β-catenin assembly, erasing differentiation and restraining cancer growth in vitro and in vivo. These studies illustrate how tissue-specific programs shape oncogene selection, surreptitiously encoding targetable therapeutic vulnerabilities.
Keyphrases