Abstract

Abstract INTRODUCTION Pilocytic astrocytomas (PA) are the most common pediatric brain tumors. They are characterized by MAPK pathway alterations, leading to its constitutive activation and modulating the balance between proliferation and oncogene-induced senescence (OIS) sustained by senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP). Little is known about the molecular implications of MAPK pathway inhibition in the proliferating and senescent tumor compartments. METHODS DKFZ-BT66 cells derived from a primary KIAA:BRAF-fusion positive PA cell line and BT40 cells derived from pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma with a BRAFV600E mutation and CDKN2A/B deletion, were used as model systems. RNA-sequencing and phospho-/proteomic datasets were generated in both the proliferative and senescent cells, and treated with the MEKi trametinib for different time-spans. A multi-omics factor analysis tool (MEFISTO) was used to identify key OIS/proliferation effectors. RESULTS Differential gene expression analysis revealed that MEK inhibition leads to the inhibition of the OIS/SASP gene program in senescent DKFZ-BT66. In addition, the protein level of several SASP factors was decreased. This translated in reduced sensitivity towards senolytics drugs, indicating inhibition of senescence features upon MEKi. MEFISTO analysis allowed to identify key transcription factors, genes and proteins involved in MAPK-induced OIS in the senescent PA cells, that were mapped using a prior knowledge network approach. Finally, single sample geneset enrichment analysis showed that most MAPK-related signatures were downregulated upon MEKi treatment, while pathways related to upstream MAPK activators (including several RTK pathways) were predicted to be upregulated, in both proliferating and senescent cells. CONCLUSION This data suggests that MAPKi reverses OIS in senescent PA cells, while inducing the activation of MAPK upstream regulators, identifying putative co-targets for the treatment of PA. Further validation of the targetability of these pathways is pending. Furthermore, the identification of the MAPK-related OIS/SASP genes provide insight about the regulation of OIS/SASP by the MAPK pathway.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call