Abstract Medulloblastoma is the most common malignant pediatric brain tumor, with some patients having abysmal survival despite an intense therapeutic regimen. A significant barrier to effective outcomes is cell-intrinsic resistance to chemo- and radio- therapy. Using a batch-normalized bulk RNA-seq dataset (GSE124814) comprised of 1350 MB samples and 291 normal cerebella, we reveal upregulation of Y-box binding protein 1 (YBX1) in MB compared to normal cerebellum. Further analysis of this dataset and others demonstrates a significant correlation between MYC and YBX1 expression in G3 tumors. Proteomics analysis also reveals higher YBX1 in G3 tumors characterized by hyperstability of MYC. Using a well-established ex vivo model, we demonstrate increased YBX1 expression as normal cerebellar progenitor cells transition to tumorigenic G3 MB stem-like cells. Deletion of YBX1 in these progenitor cells limits tumorigenesis suggesting a requirement for YBX1 in tumor initiation. We utilized an orthogonal pharmacogenetic approach to inhibit YBX1 and determine its effects on G3 MB tumor biology. Genetic depletion of YBX1 significantly reduced cellular proliferation and antagonized MYC expression in vitro. Orthotopic implantation of these YBX1KO G3 MB cells leads to increased tumor latency and animal survival. Transcriptomic analysis reveals a de-repression of neuronal target genes as well as suppression of MYC-activated genes. Evaluation of SU056, a YBX1 targeting small molecule, revealed both single agent efficacy as well as synergism with chemo- and radio- therapy. Further analysis revealed efficacy in SHH MB, even in tumors with mutant p53, suggesting cross-subgroup use for SU056. In silico docking identified binding of SU056 in the mRNA recognition domain of YBX1. Disruption of YBX1-RNA binding impacts the stability of known oncogenic transcripts, important for tumorigenesis and progression. Our findings corroborate previous identification of YBX1 as a chemoresistance factor and validate pre-clinical targeting of YBX1 to improve patient outcomes.
Read full abstract