MYC transcription activation mediated by OCT4 as a mechanism of resistance to 13-cisRA-mediated differentiation in neuroblastoma

Author:

Wei Sung-JenORCID,Nguyen Thinh H.,Yang In-Hyoung,Mook Dustin G.,Makena Monish Ram,Verlekar Dattesh,Hindle Ashly,Martinez Gloria M.,Yang Shengping,Shimada Hiroyuki,Reynolds C. Patrick,Kang Min H.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractDespite the improvement in clinical outcome with 13-cis-retinoic acid (13-cisRA) + anti-GD2 antibody + cytokine immunotherapy given in first response ~40% of high-risk neuroblastoma patients die of recurrent disease. MYCN genomic amplification is a biomarker of aggressive tumors in the childhood cancer neuroblastoma. MYCN expression is downregulated by 13-cisRA, a differentiating agent that is a component of neuroblastoma therapy. Although MYC amplification is rare in neuroblastoma at diagnosis, we report transcriptional activation of MYC medicated by the transcription factor OCT4, functionally replacing MYCN in 13-cisRA-resistant progressive disease neuroblastoma in large panels of patient-derived cell lines and xenograft models. We identified novel OCT4-binding sites in the MYC promoter/enhancer region that regulated MYC expression via phosphorylation by MAPKAPK2 (MK2). OCT4 phosphorylation at the S111 residue by MK2 was upstream of MYC transcriptional activation. Expression of OCT4, MK2, and c-MYC was higher in progressive disease relative to pre-therapy neuroblastomas and was associated with inferior patient survival. OCT4 or MK2 knockdown decreased c-MYC expression and restored the sensitivity to 13-cisRA. In conclusion, we demonstrated that high c-MYC expression independent of genomic amplification is associated with disease progression in neuroblastoma. MK2-mediated OCT4 transcriptional activation is a novel mechanism for activating the MYC oncogene in progressive disease neuroblastoma that provides a therapeutic target.

Funder

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | National Cancer Institute

Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas

Alex's Lemonade Stand Foundation for Childhood Cancer

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Cancer Research,Cell Biology,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Immunology

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