Combined tazemetostat and MAPKi enhances differentiation of papillary thyroid cancer cells harbouring BRAF(V600E) by synergistically decreasing global trimethylation of H3K27.

Article Details

Citation

Fu H, Cheng L, Sa R, Jin Y, Chen L

Combined tazemetostat and MAPKi enhances differentiation of papillary thyroid cancer cells harbouring BRAF(V600E) by synergistically decreasing global trimethylation of H3K27.

J Cell Mol Med. 2020 Jan 22. doi: 10.1111/jcmm.15007.

PubMed ID
31970877 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Clinical efficacy of differentiation therapy with mitogen-activated protein kinase inhibitors (MAPKi) for lethal radioiodine-refractory papillary thyroid cancer (RR-PTC) urgently needs to be improved and the aberrant trimethylation of histone H3 lysine 27 (H3K27) plays a vital role in BRAF(V600E) -MAPK-induced cancer dedifferentiation and drug resistance. Therefore, dual inhibition of MAPK and histone methyltransferase (EZH2) may produce more favourable treatment effects. In this study, BRAF(V600E) -mutant (BCPAP and K1) and BRAF-wild-type (TPC-1) PTC cells were treated with MAPKi (dabrafenib or selumetinib) or EZH2 inhibitor (tazemetostat), or in combination, and the expression of iodine-metabolizing genes, radioiodine uptake, and toxicity were tested. We found that tazemetostat alone slightly increased iodine-metabolizing gene expression and promoted radioiodine uptake and toxicity, irrespective of the BRAF status. However, MAPKi induced these effects preferentially in BRAF(V600E) mutant cells, which was robustly strengthened by tazemetostat incorporation. Mechanically, MAPKi-induced decrease of trimethylation of H3K27 was evidently intensified by tazemetostat in BRAF(V600E) -mutant cells. In conclusion, tazemetostat combined with MAPKi enhances differentiation of PTC cells harbouring BRAF(V600E) through synergistically decreasing global trimethylation of H3K27, representing a novel differentiation strategy.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Drugs