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Completed TRAINING, INDIVIDUAL NIH (US)

Elucidating the Role of Epigenetic Plasticity in anti-GD2 Immunotherapy Response

$25K USD

Funder NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE
Recipient Organization Dana-Farber Cancer Inst
Country United States
Start Date Jun 01, 2021
End Date May 31, 2024
Duration 1,095 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10514877
Grant Description

Project Summary (from the funded application) Ganglioside GD2 is expressed on the cell surface of numerous pediatric cancers, including Ewing sarcoma, osteosarcoma, and neuroblastoma. In 2015, FDA approval of the anti-GD2 immunotherapy dinutuximab represented a paradigm shift in the treatment of neuroblastoma by significantly reducing the incidence of tumor

recurrence. Despite dinutuximab's success, dinutuximab fails ~30% of neuroblastoma patients. Reports suggest that the degree of surface GD2 expression correlates with clinical response to dinutuximab. However, the cellular mechanisms governing GD2 regulation in tumor cells remain unknown. Correlation of surface GD2

expression with RNA-sequencing in a large cohort of neuroblastoma cell lines revealed that GD2 expression is associated with a mesenchymal epigenetic program. Epithelial-to-Mesenchymal Transition (EMT) has been widely studied in epithelial solid tumors for its purported role in chemoresistance. However, there have been

no reports linking an adrenergic-to-mesenchymal transition (AMT) epigenetic program to regulation of surface antigen GD2, making this relationship of intense interest to the neuroblastoma community. In this proposal, AIM 1 will elucidate the relationship between AMT and GD2 expression by rigorously testing the sufficiency

and necessity of the neuroblastoma-specific AMT transcription factor PRRX1 to regulate GD2. Further, loss of GD2 expression via AMT will be tested in vitro and in vivo for loss of response to dinutuximab. Aim 2 will evaluate the pathways underlying loss of GD2 expression. Preliminary data suggest that mesenchymal cell

lines and tumors express markedly reduced GD3 synthase via epigenetic silencing at the gene promoter. We will evaluate whether AMT directly regulates GD3 synthase, and whether restoration of its expression rescues response to dinutuximab. These findings will directly link epigenetic state to the downregulation of tumor

antigen GD2 and response to dinutuximab. Further, these studies may help inform rational combinatorial strategies to enhance anti-GD2 therapies in neuroblastoma, and could provide a framework for future studies in other GD2-expressing pediatric cancers.

All Grantees

Dana-Farber Cancer Inst

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