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Cancer discovery

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EP300 Selectively Controls the Enhancer Landscape of MYCN-Amplified Neuroblastoma

Published:1 March 2022 DOI: 10.1158/2159-8290.CD-21-0385 PMID: 34772733
Adam D Durbin, Tingjian Wang, Virangika K Wimalasena, Mark W Zimmerman, Deyao Li, Neekesh V Dharia, Luca Mariani, Noha A M Shendy, Stephanie Nance, Anand G Patel, Ying Shao, Maya Mundada, Lily Maxham, Paul M C Park, Logan H Sigua, Ken Morita, Amy Saur Conway, Amanda L Robichaud, Antonio R Perez-Atayde, Melissa J Bikowitz, Taylor R Quinn, Olaf Wiest, John Easton, Ernst Schönbrunn, Martha L Bulyk, Brian J Abraham, Kimberly Stegmaier, A Thomas Look, Jun Qi

Abstract

Gene expression is regulated by promoters and enhancers marked by histone H3 lysine 27 acetylation (H3K27ac), which is established by the paralogous histone acetyltransferases (HAT) EP300 and CBP. These enzymes display overlapping regulatory roles in untransformed cells, but less characterized roles in cancer cells. We demonstrate that the majority of high-risk pediatric neuroblastoma (NB) depends on EP300, whereas CBP has a limited role. EP300 controls enhancer acetylation by interacting with TFAP2β, a transcription factor member of the lineage-defining transcriptional core regulatory circuitry (CRC) in NB. To disrupt EP300, we developed a proteolysis-targeting chimera (PROTAC) compound termed "JQAD1" that selectively targets EP300 for degradation. JQAD1 treatment causes loss of H3K27ac at CRC enhancers and rapid NB apoptosis, with limited toxicity to untransformed cells where CBP may compensate. Furthermore, JQAD1 activity is critically determined by cereblon (CRBN) expression across NB cells.

Significance: EP300, but not CBP, controls oncogenic CRC-driven transcription in high-risk NB by binding TFAP2β. We developed JQAD1, a CRBN-dependent PROTAC degrader with preferential activity against EP300 and demonstrated its activity in NB. JQAD1 has limited toxicity to untransformed cells and is effective in vivo in a CRBN-dependent manner. This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 587.

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