RUNX2 inhibition disrupts a PAX3::FOXO1-RUNX2 feed-forward loop and dismantles oncogenic gene programs in fusion-positive rhabdomyosarcoma

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Abstract

Fusion-positive rhabdomyosarcoma is an aggressive pediatric cancer of skeletal muscle lineage, with a 5-year overall survival of <30% for high-risk disease, and <8% when metastatic. The PAX3::FOXO1 fusion gene, resulting from t (2:13), is a signature driver of fusion-positive rhabdomyosarcoma, but similar to other transcription-factor based fusion genes in other cancers, not currently pharmacologically tractable. To identify novel druggable proteins in fusion-positive rhabdomyosarcoma tumor tissue and cell lines, we performed mRNA-seq of RMS patient tumors and utilizing the human FP-RMS cell lines Rh30 and Rh4, found that the RUNX2 transcription factor was the top druggable dependency. In vitro loss of function studies using genetic (RNAi) or pharmacologic (small molecule CADD522) inhibition showed that RUNX2 suppression inhibited FP-RMS cell growth, induced myogenic differentiation and apoptosis, and phenocopied PAX3::FOXO1 suppression. In vivo loss of function studies using conditional (dox-inducible) or pharmacologic (small molecule CADD522) blockade of tumor growth in a xenograft model system showed that RUNX2 suppression inhibited tumor growth. Mechanistically, we identify a PAX3::FOXO1 feed-forward loop whereby PAX3::FOXO1 binds a RUNX2 enhancer to upregulate gene expression alongside MYOD1, while RUNX2 expression supports the expression of PAX3::FOXO1 at the mRNA and protein level.

Significance

RUNX2 inhibition reduces PAX3::FOXO1 expression and signaling, which impairs fusion-positive rhabdomyosarcoma oncogenic phenotypes. In vivo treatment with CADD522 decreased tumor growth and increased survival, indicating that RUNX2 is a promising therapeutic target.

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