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Spliceosomal vulnerability of MYCN-amplified neuroblastoma is contingent on PRMT5-mediated regulation of epitranscriptomic and metabolomic pathways

Bojko, Jodie; Kollareddy, Madhu; Szemes, Marianna; Bellamy, Jacob; Poon, Evon; Moukachar, Ahmad; Legge, Danny; Vincent, Emma E; Jones, Nicholas; Malik, Sally; Greenhough, Alexander; Paterson, Alex; Park, Ji Hyun; Gallacher, Kelli; Chesler, Louis; Malik, Karim

Spliceosomal vulnerability of MYCN-amplified neuroblastoma is contingent on PRMT5-mediated regulation of epitranscriptomic and metabolomic pathways Thumbnail


Authors

Jodie Bojko

Madhu Kollareddy

Marianna Szemes

Jacob Bellamy

Evon Poon

Ahmad Moukachar

Danny Legge

Emma E Vincent

Nicholas Jones

Sally Malik

Alex Paterson

Ji Hyun Park

Kelli Gallacher

Louis Chesler

Karim Malik



Abstract

Approximately 50% of poor prognosis neuroblastomas arise due to MYCN over-expression. We previously demonstrated that MYCN and PRMT5 proteins interact and PRMT5 knockdown led to apoptosis of MYCN amplified (MNA) neuroblastoma. Here we evaluate the highly selective first-in-class PRMT5 inhibitor GSK3203591 and its in vivo analogue GSK3326593 as targeted therapeutics for MNA neuroblastoma. Cell-line analyses show MYCN-dependent growth inhibition and apoptosis, with approximately 200-fold greater sensitivity of MNA neuroblastoma lines. RNA sequencing of three MNA neuroblastoma lines treated with GSK3203591 reveal deregulated MYCN transcriptional programmes and altered mRNA splicing, converging on key regulatory pathways such as DNA damage response, epitranscriptomics and cellular metabolism. Stable isotope labelling experiments in the same cell lines demonstrate that glutamine metabolism is impeded following GSK3203591 treatment, linking with disruption of the MLX/Mondo nutrient sensors via intron retention of MLX mRNA. Interestingly, glutaminase (GLS) protein decreases after GSK3203591 treatment despite unchanged transcript levels. We demonstrate that the RNA methyltransferase METTL3 and cognate reader YTHDF3 proteins are lowered following their mRNAs undergoing GSK3203591-induced splicing alterations, indicating epitranscriptomic regulation of GLS; accordingly, we observe decreases of GLS mRNA m6A methylation following GSK3203591 treatment, and decreased GLS protein following YTHDF3 knockdown. In vivo efficacy of GSK3326593 is confirmed by increased survival of Th-MYCN mice, with drug treatment triggering splicing events and protein decreases consistent with in vitro data. Together our study demonstrates the PRMT5-dependent spliceosomal vulnerability of MNA neuroblastoma and identifies the epitranscriptome and glutamine metabolism as critical determinants of this sensitivity.

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Sep 13, 2024
Online Publication Date Sep 21, 2024
Publication Date Nov 1, 2024
Deposit Date Sep 26, 2024
Publicly Available Date Nov 1, 2024
Journal Cancer Letters
Print ISSN 0304-3835
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 604
Article Number 217263
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.canlet.2024.217263
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/13014034
This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals:

SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-Being

Ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages

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