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Rb and p53-Deficient Myxofibrosarcoma and Undifferentiated Pleomorphic Sarcoma Require Skp2 for Survival.

George Z LiTomoyo OkadaYoung-Mi KimNarasimhan P AgaramFrancisco Sanchez-VegaYawei ShenNorifumi TsubokawaJordan RiosAxel S MartinMark A DicksonLi-Xuan QinNicholas D SocciSamuel Singer
Published in: Cancer research (2020)
Myxofibrosarcoma (MFS) and undifferentiated pleomorphic sarcoma (UPS) are highly genetically complex soft tissue sarcomas. Up to 50% of patients develop distant metastases, but current systemic therapies have limited efficacy. MFS and UPS have recently been shown to commonly harbor copy number alterations or mutations in the tumor suppressor genes RB1 and TP53. As these alterations have been shown to engender dependence on the oncogenic protein Skp2 for survival of transformed cells in mouse models, we sought to examine its function and potential as a therapeutic target in MFS/UPS. Comparative genomic hybridization and next-generation sequencing confirmed that a significant fraction of MFS and UPS patient samples (n = 94) harbor chromosomal deletions and/or loss-of-function mutations in RB1 and TP53 (88% carry alterations in at least one gene; 60% carry alterations in both). Tissue microarray analysis identified a correlation between absent Rb and p53 expression and positive expression of Skp2. Downregulation of Skp2 or treatment with the Skp2-specific inhibitor C1 revealed that Skp2 drives proliferation of patient-derived MFS/UPS cell lines deficient in both Rb and p53 by degrading p21 and p27. Inhibition of Skp2 using the neddylation-activating enzyme inhibitor pevonedistat decreased growth of Rb/p53-negative patient-derived cell lines and mouse xenografts. These results demonstrate that loss of both Rb and p53 renders MFS and UPS dependent on Skp2, which can be therapeutically exploited and could provide the basis for promising novel systemic therapies for MFS and UPS. SIGNIFICANCE: Loss of both Rb and p53 renders myxofibrosarcoma and undifferentiated pleomorphic sarcoma dependent on Skp2, which could provide the basis for promising novel systemic therapies.See related commentary by Lambert and Jones, p. 2437.
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