Abstract

Abstract Rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) is the most common pediatric soft tissue sarcoma. Despite rigorous scientific advances and clinical trials, the survival rate for high-risk RMS has not increased above 20% in the last three decades. A deeper understanding of the basic biology driving RMS tumorigenesis is needed to discover novel therapeutic targets. RMS can be divided into two major histologic subtypes: embryonal RMS (ERMS) and alveolar RMS (ARMS). ARMS accounts for 20% of pediatric cases and has poorer survival. The majority of ARMS tumors harbor t(2;13)(q35;q14) or t(1;13)(p36;q14) chromosomal translocations resulting in the PAX3-FOXO1 (P3F) and PAX7-FOXO1 (P7F) fusion oncoproteins, respectively. ARMS tumors that lack oncofusions more closely resemble ERMS. Classifying on fusion status more accurately describes the disease and highlights the significance of P3/7F. ARMS tumor genomes only contain an average of 6.4 somatic mutations suggesting the oncofusion protein is the key oncogenic driver and a potential candidate for therapeutic intervention. RMS is commonly thought to arise from skeletal muscle progenitor cells that fail to terminally differentiate. However, RMS occurs throughout the body in sites devoid of skeletal muscle, underscoring the potential for alternative cells of origin. Our lab established that endothelial progenitors are indeed a cell of origin for ARMS by generating a genetically engineered mouse model with endothelial cell specific P3F expression coupled with Cdkn2a loss. We further generated a human model system derived from TP53-null human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs), in which we direct differentiation to endothelial cell fate and then force P3F expression. P3F expression during endothelial cell directed differentiation blocked endothelial maturation and instead reprogrammed cells shifting cell fate to skeletal muscle-like cells that form ARMS tumors in mice. Generation of iPSC-derived ARMS (iARMS) occurs over 15 days and provides a unique model to determine the kinetics and specific genomic contributions facilitated by P3F during RMS transformation. To investigate the genomic changes occurring during iARMS transformation I utilized CUT&RUN for P3F and H3K27ac to assess P3F occupancy and enhancer landscape, ATAC-seq to assess chromatin accessibility, and RNA-seq to assess gene expression changes at timepoints throughout the transformation event. These results define the fundamental genomic changes needed for transformation into FP-RMS by P3F and uncovers the key determinants of ARMS cell identity. The iARMS system provides a unique platform to uncover how P3F establishes and maintains RMS cell state and to dissect the specific dependencies required to maintain the ARMS cell state. Understanding the fundamental mechanism of P3F-driven tumorigenesis could provide greater resolution into the key disease determinants to focus pre-clinical efforts on pivotal targets. Citation Format: Bradley T. Stevens, Yang Zhang, Randolph K. Larsen, Grace E. Adkins, Jack D. Hopkins, Darden W. Kimbrough, Matthew R. Garcia, Brian J. Abraham, Mark E. Hatley. Determining the genomic basis of PAX3-FOXO1 mediated transformation in rhabdomyosarcoma [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2024; Part 1 (Regular Abstracts); 2024 Apr 5-10; San Diego, CA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2024;84(6_Suppl):Abstract nr 136.

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