- Title
- Therapeutic targeting of prenatal pontine ID1 signaling in diffuse midline glioma
- Creator
- Messinger, Dana; Harris, Micah K.; Qin, Tingting; Mullan, Brendan; Siada, Ruby; Ravindran, Ramya; Niculcea, Michael; Dowling, Abigail R.; Bradin, Joshua; Ginn, Kevin F.; Gener, Melissa A. H.; Dorris, Kathleen; Cummings, Jessica R.; Vitanza, Nicholas A.; Schmidt, SV; Spitzer, J; Li, J; Filbin, MG; Cao, X; Castro, MG; Lowenstein, PR; Mody, R; Chinnaiyan, A; Thomas, Chase; Desprez, PY; McAllister, S; Dun, Matthew D.; Hawkins, C; Waszak, SM; Venneti, S; Koschmann, C; Yadav, VN; Yang, Tao; Sweha, Stefan R.; Woo, Rinette; Siddaway, Robert; Burkert, Martin; Stallard, Stefanie
- Relation
- Neuro-Oncology Vol. 25, Issue 1, p. 54-67
- Publisher Link
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/neuonc/noac141
- Publisher
- Oxford University Press
- Resource Type
- journal article
- Date
- 2023
- Description
- Background: Diffuse midline gliomas (DMG) are highly invasive brain tumors with rare survival beyond two years past diagnosis and limited understanding of the mechanism behind tumor invasion. Previous reports demonstrate upregulation of the protein ID1 with H3K27M and ACVR1 mutations in DMG, but this has not been confirmed in human tumors or therapeutically targeted. Methods: Whole exome, RNA, and ChIP-sequencing was performed on the ID1 locus in DMG tissue. Scratch-assay migration and transwell invasion assays of cultured cells were performed following shRNA-mediated ID1-knockdown. In vitro and in vivo genetic and pharmacologic [cannabidiol (CBD)] inhibition of ID1 on DMG tumor growth was assessed. Patient-reported CBD dosing information was collected. Results: Increased ID1 expression in human DMG and in utero electroporation (IUE) murine tumors is associated with H3K27M mutation and brainstem location. ChIP-sequencing indicates ID1 regulatory regions are epigenetically active in human H3K27M-DMG tumors and prenatal pontine cells. Higher ID1-expressing astrocyte-like DMG cells share a transcriptional program with oligo/astrocyte-precursor cells (OAPCs) from the developing human brain and demonstrate upregulation of the migration regulatory protein SPARCL1. Genetic and pharmacologic (CBD) suppression of ID1 decreases tumor cell invasion/migration and tumor growth in H3.3/H3.1K27M PPK-IUE and human DIPGXIIIP* in vivo models of pHGG. The effect of CBD on cell proliferation appears to be non-ID1 mediated. Finally, we collected patient-reported CBD treatment data, finding that a clinical trial to standardize dosing may be beneficial. Conclusions: H3K27M-mediated re-activation of ID1 in DMG results in a SPARCL1+ migratory transcriptional program that is therapeutically targetable with CBD.
- Subject
- cannabidiol (CBD); diffuse midline gliomas (DMG); ID1; invasion/migration; ROS; SDG 3; Sustainable Development Goals
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1487068
- Identifier
- uon:52045
- Identifier
- ISSN:1523-5866
- Rights
- x
- Language
- eng
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