Iyer Rema, Deshpande Anagha, Pedgaonkar Aditi, Bala Pramod Akula, Kim Taehee, Brien Gerard L, Finlay Darren, Vuori Kristiina, Soragni Alice, Murad Rabi, Deshpande Aniruddha J
Cancer Genome and Epigenetics Program, National Cancer Institute-Designated Cancer Center, Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute, La Jolla, CA 92037, USA.
Computational Biology Core, Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute, La Jolla, CA 92037, USA.
bioRxiv. 2024 Sep 25:2024.09.23.614593. doi: 10.1101/2024.09.23.614593.
Synovial Sarcoma (SySa) is an aggressive soft tissue sarcoma that accounts for 5 - 10% of all soft tissue sarcomas. Current treatment involves radiation and radical surgery including limb amputation, highlighting the urgent need to develop targeted therapies. We reasoned that transcriptional rewiring by the fusion protein SS18-SSX, the sole oncogenic driver in SySa, creates specific vulnerabilities that can be exploited for treatment. To uncover genes that are selectively essential for SySa, we mined The Cancer Dependency Map (DepMap) data to identify genes that specifically impact the fitness of SySa compared to other tumor cell lines. Targeted CRISPR library screening of SySa-selective candidates revealed that the small ubiquitin-like modifier 2 (SUMO2) was one of the strongest dependencies both as well as . TAK-981, a clinical-stage small molecule SUMO2 inhibitor potently inhibited growth and colony-forming ability. Strikingly, transcriptomic studies showed that pharmacological SUMO2 inhibition with TAK-981 treatment elicited a profound reversal of a gene expression program orchestrated by SS18-SSX fusions. Of note, genetic or pharmacological SUMO2 inhibition reduced global and chromatin levels of the SS18-SSX fusion protein with a concomitant reduction in histone 2A lysine 119 ubiquitination (H2AK119ub), an epigenetic mark that plays an important role in SySa pathogenesis. Taken together, our studies identify SUMO2 as a novel, selective vulnerability in SySa. Since SUMO2 inhibitors are currently in Phase 1/2 clinical trials for other cancers, our findings present a novel avenue for targeted treatment of synovial sarcoma.
滑膜肉瘤(SySa)是一种侵袭性软组织肉瘤,占所有软组织肉瘤的5%-10%。目前的治疗方法包括放疗和根治性手术,如肢体截肢,这凸显了开发靶向治疗的迫切需求。我们推断,融合蛋白SS18-SSX作为SySa中唯一的致癌驱动因子,其转录重排产生了可用于治疗的特定脆弱性。为了发现对SySa具有选择性必需性的基因,我们挖掘了癌症依赖性图谱(DepMap)数据,以确定与其他肿瘤细胞系相比,对SySa适应性有特异性影响的基因。对SySa选择性候选基因进行靶向CRISPR文库筛选发现,小泛素样修饰物2(SUMO2)是最强的依赖性基因之一。TAK-981是一种临床阶段的小分子SUMO2抑制剂,能有效抑制细胞生长和集落形成能力。引人注目的是,转录组学研究表明,用TAK-981进行药理SUMO2抑制可引发由SS18-SSX融合体精心编排的基因表达程序的显著逆转。值得注意的是,基因或药理SUMO2抑制降低了SS18-SSX融合蛋白的整体水平和染色质水平,同时降低了组蛋白2A赖氨酸119泛素化(H2AK119ub),这是一种在SySa发病机制中起重要作用的表观遗传标记。综上所述,我们的研究确定SUMO2是SySa中一种新的选择性脆弱性。由于SUMO2抑制剂目前正处于针对其他癌症的1/2期临床试验阶段,我们的发现为滑膜肉瘤的靶向治疗提供了一条新途径。