H3K27M-driven hypertranscription leads to a new targetable dependency in diffuse midline gliomas
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Diffuse midline gliomas (DMGs) are driven by the H3K27M oncohistone—a challenging therapeutic target. However, conventional therapeutic modalities are never curative. Against this backdrop, we address an important unresolved question--are there H3K27M-induced oncogenic vulnerabilities that can be exploited for therapeutic benefit. We show that H3K27M induces hypertranscription, thus identifying hypertranscription as a new molecular feature of H3K27M-driven DMGs. We demonstrate this finding in genetic mouse models, human DMG cells, and primary tumor specimens. We further demonstrate that H3K27M-induced hypertranscription perturbs replication, heightens basal replication stress, and enhances sensitivity to ATR inhibition. In exploring therapeutic implications of these findings, we document brain penetrance, target engagement, and therapeutic efficacy of a clinical-stage ATR inhibitor (alnodesertib) in vitro and in intracranial DMG xenografts. We further demonstrate synergistic activity of alnodesertib with radiotherapy—the current standard of care for DMGs. These findings provide the mechanistic underpinning and preclinical rationale for including alnodesertib as monotherapy and in combination with radiation in clinical trials for children with H3K27M DMGs. The broad implications of our studies highlight ATR inhibition as a therapy for aggressive human cancers displaying hypertranscription.