Abstract

Abstract The majority of sporadic renal cell carcinoma (RCC) cases present as the clear cell subtype (ccRCC) and are associated with the biallelic inactivation of the von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) gene, leading to constitutive activation of the cellular hypoxia response and deleterious alterations to gene expression, metabolism, and growth. Despite the near ubiquity of VHL loss, evidence suggests that it alone is insufficient to drive tumor establishment. Additional loss of function (LOF) mutations in epigenetic regulatory proteins including PBRM1, SETD2 and BAP1 have been identified as tumor drivers. The frequency and penetrance of these mutations in epigenetic regulators implicates a vulnerability in ccRCC that may be exploited to develop new therapies. To explore this vulnerability, the Ailles lab completed a screen of the Structural Genomics Consortium’s (SGC) epiprobe library - a panel of inhibitors targeting an array of epigenetic regulators in patient derived ccRCC models. Among the several promising targets identified, a particularly favorable inhibition profile was noted for MS023, an inhibitor of the type I protein arginine methyltransferase family (PRMT1/3/4/6 and 8). PRMTs transfer methyl groups to nuclear histones and cytoplasmic targets, influencing gene expression, mRNA processing and viability. This growth inhibition was corroborated using an additional type I PRMT compound, GSK3368715. CRISPR-mediated deletion of type I PRMT targets indicated that PRMT1 is the main enzyme responsible for growth inhibition in our ccRCC models. Furthermore, genetic depletion of PRMT1 via shRNA phenocopied pharmacological inhibition and proliferative growth was restored in the presence of MS023 by overexpressing PRMT1. Finally, MS023 treatment of mice bearing ccRCC cell line and patient derived xenografts led to significant inhibition of tumor growth in vivo. Transcriptomic profiling of chemical treatment and PRMT1 genetic depletion demonstrated that PRMT1 inhibition triggers a significant down regulation of genes related to cell cycle progression and DNA damage. ccRCC cells treated with MS023 accumulated significant levels of DNA damage before undergoing cell death, with several DDR-related proteins being down-regulated. Proximity ligation and proteomic analysis (Bio-ID) revealed that PRMT1’s interactors skew heavily towards RNA metabolism regulators and widespread alterations in mRNA processing were noted with MS023 treatment. Evidence continues to mount that PRMT1 is implicated in the biology of cancer, but to our knowledge, no thorough investigations have been performed in the context of ccRCC. Our data suggests that inhibition of PRMT1 inhibits processing of mRNA transcripts, compromises DDR mechanisms, leading to an accumulation of double stranded breaks, cytostasis and cell death. Thus PRMT1 represents a viable therapeutic target in ccRCC. Citation Format: Joseph Walton, Karen Arevalo, Angel SN Ng, Jalna Meens, Christina Karamboulas, Panagiotis Prinos, Brian Raught, Eric Chen, Cheryl Arrowsmith, Laurie Ailles. PRMT1 is a critical dependency in clear cell renal cell carcinoma with roles in post- transcriptional regulation and DNA damage response [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 3226.

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