Interaction between SNAI2 and MYOD enhances oncogenesis and suppresses differentiation in Fusion Negative Rhabdomyosarcoma

Author:

Pomella Silvia,Sreenivas PrethishORCID,Gryder Berkley E.ORCID,Wang Long,Milewski DavidORCID,Cassandri Matteo,Baxi Kunal,Hensch Nicole R.ORCID,Carcarino Elena,Song Young,Chou Hsien-ChaoORCID,Yohe Marielle E.,Stanton Benjamin Z.ORCID,Amadio Bruno,Caruana IgnazioORCID,De Stefanis Cristiano,De Vito Rita,Locatelli Franco,Chen Yidong,Chen Eleanor Y.,Houghton Peter,Khan JavedORCID,Rota RossellaORCID,Ignatius Myron S.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractRhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) is an aggressive pediatric malignancy of the muscle, that includes Fusion Positive (FP)-RMS harboring PAX3/7-FOXO1 and Fusion Negative (FN)-RMS commonly with RAS pathway mutations. RMS express myogenic master transcription factors MYOD and MYOG yet are unable to terminally differentiate. Here, we report that SNAI2 is highly expressed in FN-RMS, is oncogenic, blocks myogenic differentiation, and promotes growth. MYOD activates SNAI2 transcription via super enhancers with striped 3D contact architecture. Genome wide chromatin binding analysis demonstrates that SNAI2 preferentially binds enhancer elements and competes with MYOD at a subset of myogenic enhancers required for terminal differentiation. SNAI2 also suppresses expression of a muscle differentiation program modulated by MYOG, MEF2, and CDKN1A. Further, RAS/MEK-signaling modulates SNAI2 levels and binding to chromatin, suggesting that the differentiation blockade by oncogenic RAS is mediated in part by SNAI2. Thus, an interplay between SNAI2, MYOD, and RAS prevents myogenic differentiation and promotes tumorigenesis.

Funder

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | NCI | Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer Institute

Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry

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