6533b832fe1ef96bd129afd7

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Combined HAT/EZH2 modulation leads to cancer-selective cell death

Valeria CicatielloAlfonso BaldiEva M. Janssen-megensSimon HeathBernard Olivier AMariarosaria ConteEdo VellengaGianluca SbardellaAlessandra FeoliAntonello MaiFrancesca PetragliaConcetta IngenitoBowon KimValeria Belsito PetrizziGuoqiang YiStefano TomassiAbhishek SinghAngela NebbiosoIvo GutPaul FlicekAlbertus T. J. WierengaMarie-laure YaspoJoost H.a. MartensJoost H.a. MartensHendrik G. StunnenbergIvana ApicellaLucia ScisciolaSergio ValenteEttore NovellinoVéronique Della ValleMenotti RuvoSandro De FalcoAmit MandoliColin LogieVincenzo CarafaLucia Altucci

subject

0301 basic medicineacetylation; apoptosis; cancer; epigenetics; methylation; oncologyProgrammed cell death[SDV.CAN]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Cancer03 medical and health sciencesacetylation; apoptosis; cancer; epigenetics; methylationIn vivomedicinecancerMolecular Biologyacetylationepigeneticsbusiness.industryCancer; Epigenetics; Apoptosis; Acetylation; MethylationEZH2apoptosisApoptosiEpigeneticCancerEpigenomemedicine.disease3. Good healthLeukemia030104 developmental biologyOncologyApoptosisCancer researchmethylationbusinessEx vivoResearch Paper

description

Contains fulltext : 197351.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access) Epigenetic alterations have been associated with both pathogenesis and progression of cancer. By screening of library compounds, we identified a novel hybrid epi-drug MC2884, a HAT/EZH2 inhibitor, able to induce bona fide cancer-selective cell death in both solid and hematological cancers in vitro, ex vivo and in vivo xenograft models. Anticancer action was due to an epigenome modulation by H3K27me3, H3K27ac, H3K9/14ac decrease, and to caspase-dependent apoptosis induction. MC2884 triggered mitochondrial pathway apoptosis by up-regulation of cleaved-BID, and strong down-regulation of BCL2. Even aggressive models of cancer, such as p53(-/-) or TET2(-/-) cells, responded to MC2884, suggesting MC2884 therapeutic potential also for the therapy of TP53 or TET2-deficient human cancers. MC2884 induced massive apoptosis in ex vivo human primary leukemia blasts with poor prognosis in vivo, by targeting BCL2 expression. MC2884-treatment reduced acetylation of the BCL2 promoter at higher level than combined p300 and EZH2 inhibition. This suggests a key role for BCL-2 reduction in potentiating responsiveness, also in combination therapy with BCL2 inhibitors. Finally, we identified both the mechanism of MC2884 action as well as a potential therapeutic scheme of its use. Altogether, this provides proof of concept for the use of epi-drugs coupled with epigenome analyses to 'personalize' precision medicine.

https://hdl.handle.net/2066/197351