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< BACK TO CLINICAL BREAKTHROUGHS IN ONCOLOGY

June 2023

ONCOLOGY

COMBINING EPIGENETIC AND METABOLIC APPROACHES FOR TARGETED CANCER TREATMENT

Featuring: ​Ali Shilatifard, PhD

​​Northwestern Medicine scientists have identified a novel vulnerability in a subset of genes commonly mutated in cancer, according to a study recently published in The Journal of Clinical Investigation.

Mutations in a set of genes known as the COMplex of Proteins Associated with Set1 (COMPASS) family, specifically mutations in the genes MLL3 and MLL4, are common in patients with many types of cancer.

To better understand these genes and what role they play in tumor growth, investigators performed a CRISPR screen in embryonic stem cells from mice with both MLL3 and MLL4 deleted. The MLL3 and MLL4 knockout cells appeared to ramp up the production of purine, an essential building block for DNA and RNA, according to the study.

The scientists then treated the MLL3 and MLL4 deleted cells with a purine synthesis inhibitor, which hampered cell growth.

​To see if cancers with mutations in these genes could be slowed with a similar tactic, the investigators tested their approach on cells from patients with colorectal cancer, which commonly features mutations in MLL3 and/or MLL4. They found that cancer cells with mutations in MLL3/4 were more sensitive to the purine synthesis inhibitor as compared to cells expressing wild type MLL4, according to the study.

The findings could represent a potential treatment direction for different cancers that share MLL3 or MLL4 mutations, said Ali Shilatifard, PhD, the Robert Francis Furchgott Professor and chair of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics and senior author of the study.

“MLL3 and MLL4 are highly mutated in a large number of solid tumors and hematopoietic malignancies. There’s very little therapy for these cancers and understanding what causes the cells to become cancerous as a result of this mutation is going to be central for the development of targeted therapeutics,” said Shilatifard, who is also the director of the Simpson Querrey Institute for Epigenetics and leader of the Cancer Epigenetics & Nuclear Dynamics Program at Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University. “Our work is showing that basically the purine metabolism inhibition is one way of treating the cells that have mutations for MLL4.”

Shilatifard said he hopes to move to preclinical studies to further validate the efficacy of the approach.

​“A large number of tumors don’t respond to immunotherapy. We think that this mixture of immunotherapy with epigenetic therapy and metabolism therapy, that combination could be very powerful,” he said.

Zibo Zhao, PhD, research assistant professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics, was first author of the study. Kaixiang Cao, PhD, a former postdoctoral fellow in Shilatifard’s lab, was also a co-author of the study.

“We hope our research can support the translation of this to clinical settings and then we could use this as a biomarker to stratify the patients, so they can get more personalized therapy by targeting these mutations in human cancer,” Zhao said.

Other Feinberg faculty co-authors included Feng Yue, PhD, the Duane and Susan Burnham Professor of Molecular Medicine; Navdeep Chandel, PhD, the David W. Cugell, MD, Professor of Medicine in the Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care and of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics; Rintaro Hashizume, MD, PhD, research associate professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics; and Issam Ben-Sahra, PhD, assistant professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics. All are members of the Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University.

The study was supported by National Institutes of Health grants R35-CA197569, K99HD094906 and R50-CA221848.

​This article was originally published in the Feinberg School of Medicine News Center on June 22, 2023. ​
Ali Shilatifard, PhD headshot
Ali Shilatifard, PhD,  the Robert Francis Furchgott Professor and chair of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics, was senior author of the study published in The Journal of Clinical Investigation.

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