Abstract Diffuse hemispheric gliomas (DHGs) account for 30% of aggressive cerebral tumors in children and young adults, exhibiting abysmal outcomes. Co-existing recurrent mutations in H3.3 histones at residue G34 (H3.3-G34R/V mutation) and concurrent inactivating mutations in TP53 and α-thalassemia/intellectual disability-X-linked gene (ATRX) implicate a coordinated molecular effort to drive oncogenesis. ATRX, a core component of the SWItch/Sucrose Non-Fermentable chromatin remodeling complex, regulates the incorporation of histone H3.3 into chromatin sites across the genome to maintain epigenome integrity. Yet, it is unclear how ATRX loss combines with H3.3-G34R/V mutations to influence cellular phenotype and dysregulate neuro-developmental programs. We propose that ATRX deficiency coordinates with key oncogenic partners by inducing oncogenic transcriptional programs and neuro-developmental pathways in DHGs. To investigate this, we employed CRISPR-editing to model H3.3-G34R followed by ATRX knockdown (ATRX-KD) in a TP53 mutant (TP53-mut) human-induced pluripotent stem cell (h-iPSC) line, developing an isogenic system to map contributions to epigenetic dysfunction made by specific molecular alterations. Upon differentiation of our h-iPSCs to neural stem cells (NSCs), we found unique transcriptional profiles associated with each genetic alteration, with upregulation of forebrain progenitor genes driven by ATRX-loss. Hierarchal clustering of normalized transcript counts revealed gene signatures from each model driving unique functional pathways, with the ATRX-KD and the triple mutant (TP53-mut, ATRX-KD, H3.3-G34R) signatures enriched for neural development pathways. Additionally, both signatures were associated with published transcriptional profiles of G34-mutant DHGs, emphasizing the disease relevance of our models. Further, time-course analysis using cerebral organoids uncovered distinct morphological changes with each alteration, with the triple mutant exhibiting impaired differentiation at later time points. These latter findings suggest that ATRX deficiency transcriptionally influences early neuronal differentiation, effects further refined by H3.3-G34 mutation. To conclude, our innovative models demonstrate the involvement of ATRX in neuro-developmental and differentiation phenotypes, illuminating underlying molecular features of aggressive DHGs.
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