Abstract

Despite significant efforts to improve the outcomes of pediatric diffuse midline gliomas, such as diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG), prognosis remains dismal with a 5-year survival of <1%. The standard of care treatment for DIPG is fractionated radiation, but the disease inevitably progresses in 6 months or less. There is a significant unmet need to improve the clinical outcomes for pediatric DIPG patients. Approximately 70-80% of DIPG tumors contain mutations in TP53 tumor suppressor protein. These TP53 mutations are associated with resistance to radiation treatments in DIPG patients. The mechanisms of increased radio-resistance of p53-mutant DIPG are poorly understood. The objective of this study was to identify novel pharmacological agents that would augment radiation sensitivity of p53 mutant DIPG cell lines, and to establish their molecular mechanism of action. SF8628 pediatric DIPG cell line harboring p53 mutation was obtained from MilliporeSigma. CellRad benchtop X-ray irradiator (Precision X-Ray) was used for radiation sensitization experiments. Vi-CELL BLU cell viability analyzer was used for high-throughput screening of small molecule compound libraries with and without radiation treatments. Proteomics Core facility was utilized for mass spec analysis of protein targets of Compound-X. To identify novel drug candidates that would sensitize DIPG to therapeutic radiation, we carried out an unbiased screen of curated libraries of small molecules with diverse scaffolds in p53 mutant DIPG cells. This radio-sensitization screen yielded a single molecule, Compound-X, that was found to have profound growth-inhibitory and radiation-sensitizing effects in DIPG cells. Compound-X was found to induce a robust cell cycle arrest of DIPG cells in G2/M, the most radio-sensitive phase of the cell cycle. Furthermore, Compound-X elicited a massive apoptotic cell death of DIPG cells. An unbiased RNA sequencing approach revealed that Compound-X inhibits expression of the Interferon-related DNA damage Resistant Signature (IRDS), a sub-group of interferon-stimulated genes (ISGs) known to promote radiation and chemotherapy resistance in high-grade gliomas. To identify the target of Compound-X, we carried out affinity purification of Compound-X associated complexes from p53 mutant DIPG cell lysates. Mass spectrometry analysis of Compound-X-purified protein complexes identified XRCC4 as a protein that uniquely associated with Compound-X. RNAi knock-down experiments revealed that XRCC4 is required for cytotoxic effects of Compound-X. Importantly, Compound-X-mediated XRCC4 targeting caused a delay in DNA DSBs repair after radiation treatment. An unbiased screen of small molecule drug candidates identified a novel XRCC4-targeting agent, Compound-X, as potent radiation sensitizer in p53 mutant DIPG cells. This work may lead to clinical trials investigating novel XRCC4-targeting agent in pediatric patients with DIPG.

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