Abstract Supratentorial ependymomas (ST-EPN) are pediatric brain tumors found in the cerebral hemisphere, driven by the oncogenic fusion of ZFTA with RELA. Other than surgery and radiotherapy, these tumors do not have effective therapeutic options. Recurrent ST-EPN tumors are highly aggressive and hard to treat, which makes these tumors lethal. To understand the disease mechanism and potentially identify or develop therapeutic targets, we established patient-derived models and interrogated the genetic and metabolic dependencies using cutting-edge, near-genome-wide genetic screening and metabolomic tools. Our integrative transcriptomics and metabolic analysis identify that the ZFTA-RELA fusion drives methionine metabolic reprogramming in the cancer stem cells to regulate permissive epigenetic status and pyrimidine nucleotide synthesis to fuel tumor growth. Limiting methionine or inhibiting MAT2A, a rate-limiting enzyme of methionine metabolism in ST-EPN cells, results in profound cell cycle arrest and make the cells vulnerable to pyrimidine inhibitors compared to other pediatric brain tumors. Thus, for treatment, along with radiotherapy, blocking the methionine cycle by using the methionine limited diet or in combination with pyrimidine metabolism inhibitors can be a novel therapeutic strategy against the aggressive paediatric ST-EPN tumors.
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