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. 2021 Nov 12;23(Suppl 6):vi220–vi221. doi: 10.1093/neuonc/noab196.886

TMOD-25. LATENT SOX9-POSITIVE CELLS BEHIND MYC-DRIVEN MEDULLOBLASTOMA RELAPSE

Anna Borgenvik 1, Sara Bolin 2, Vasil Savov 3, Karl O Holmberg 4, Miao Zhao 4, Gabriela Rosén 4, Sonja Hutter 4, Alexandra Garancher 5, Aldwin Suryo Rahmanto 6, Tobias Bergström 4, Oliver Mainwaring 4, Damiana Sattanino 7, Annemieke D Verbaan 8, Jessica Rusert 5, Anders Sundström 4, Yonglong Dang 4, Amelie Wenz 9, Stacey Richardson 10, Grammatiki Fotaki 11, Geraldine Giraud 4, Rebecca Hill 10, Adrian Dubuc 12, Antonia Kalushkova 4, Marc Remke 13, Matko Cancer 14, Helena Jernberg-Wiklund 4, xingqi Chen 4, Michael D Taylor 15, Olle Sangfelt 16, Steven Clifford 17, Ulrich Schüller 18, Robert Wechsler-Reya 5, Holger Weishaupt 4, Fredrik Swartling 20
PMCID: PMC8598423

Abstract

Tumor recurrence developing from therapy resistance, immune escape and metastasis is the leading cause of death in medulloblastoma, the most frequent malignant pediatric brain tumor. Amplification of MYC genes is the most common genetic alteration in Group 3 and Group 4 subgroups that constitute two thirds of medulloblastoma. SOX9 is a transcription factor present in stem cells in the normal brain but is limited to rare, quiescent cells in medulloblastoma patients with MYC gene amplifications. By studying paired primary-recurrent patient samples and patient-derived xenografts we here identified significant accumulation of SOX9-positive cells in Group 3 and Group 4 relapses. To follow relapse at the single cell level we developed an inducible dual Tet model of MYC-driven MB, where MYC was re-directed from the treatment-sensitive bulk cells to resistant, dormant SOX9-positive cells by doxycycline. In this model, distant recurrent tumors and spinal metastases developed. SOX9 promoted immune escape, DNA repair suppression and was essential for recurrence. Tumor cell dormancy was non-hierarchical, migratory and depended on MYC suppression by SOX9 to promote relapse. By using computational modeling and treatment we also showed how doxorubicin and MGMT inhibitors were specifically targeting recurrent cells that could be of potential use in future treatments for patients affected by these fatal relapses.

Keywords: SOX9, medulloblastoma, relapse, MYCN, Tet ON/OFF mouse model


Articles from Neuro-Oncology are provided here courtesy of Society for Neuro-Oncology and Oxford University Press

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