A MYCN-driven de-differentiation profile identifies a subgroup of aggressive retinoblastoma.
Tatsiana RylElena AfanasyevaTill HartmannMelanie SchwermerMarkus SchneiderChristopher SchröderMaren WagemannsArthur BisterDeniz KanberLaura SteenpassKathrin SchrammBarbara JonesDavid T W JonesEva BiewaldKathy AstrahantseffHelmut HannenbergSven RahmannDietmar R LohmannAlexander SchrammPetra KettelerPublished in: Communications biology (2024)
Retinoblastoma are childhood eye tumors arising from retinal precursor cells. Two distinct retinoblastoma subtypes with different clinical behavior have been described based on gene expression and methylation profiling. Using consensus clustering of DNA methylation analysis from 61 retinoblastomas, we identify a MYCN-driven cluster of subtype 2 retinoblastomas characterized by DNA hypomethylation and high expression of genes involved in protein synthesis. Subtype 2 retinoblastomas outside the MYCN-driven cluster are characterized by high expression of genes from mesodermal development, including NKX2-5. Knockdown of MYCN expression in retinoblastoma cell models causes growth arrest and reactivates a subtype 1-specific photoreceptor signature. These molecular changes suggest that removing the driving force of MYCN oncogenic activity rescues molecular circuitry driving subtype 1 biology. The MYCN-RB gene signature generated from the cell models better identifies MYCN-driven retinoblastoma than MYCN amplification and can identify cases that may benefit from MYCN-targeted therapy. MYCN drives tumor progression in a molecularly defined retinoblastoma subgroup, and inhibiting MYCN activity could restore a more differentiated and less aggressive tumor biology.
Keyphrases
- dna methylation
- genome wide
- gene expression
- poor prognosis
- single cell
- single molecule
- cell therapy
- long non coding rna
- signaling pathway
- randomized controlled trial
- binding protein
- stem cells
- oxidative stress
- cell death
- diabetic retinopathy
- mouse model
- bone marrow
- clinical trial
- clinical practice
- study protocol
- open label
- circulating tumor cells
- circulating tumor