Efficient induction of differentiation and growth inhibition in IDH1 mutant glioma cells by the DNMT Inhibitor Decitabine Journal Article


Authors: Turcan, S.; Fabius, A. W. M.; Borodovsky, A.; Pedraza, A.; Brennan, C.; Huse, J.; Viale, A.; Riggins, G. J.; Chan, T. A.
Article Title: Efficient induction of differentiation and growth inhibition in IDH1 mutant glioma cells by the DNMT Inhibitor Decitabine
Abstract: Mutation in the IDH1 or IDH2 genes occurs frequently in gliomas and other human malignancies. In intermediate grade gliomas, IDH1 mutation is found in over 70% of tumors. These mutations impart the mutant IDH enzyme with a neomorphic activity - the ability to synthesize 2-hydroxyglutarate (2-HG). This ability leads to a reprogramming of chromatin state, a block in differentiation, and the establishment of the glioma hypermethylator phenotype (G-CIMP). It has been hypothesized but not proven that the extensive DNA methylation that occurs in G-CIMP tumors helps maintain and "lock in" glioma cancer cells in a dedifferentiated state. Here, we tested this hypothesis by treating patient derived IDH1 mutant glioma initiating cells (GIC) with non-cytotoxic, epigenetically targeted doses of the DNMT inhibitor decitabine. Global methylome analysis of treated IDH1 mutant GICs showed that DAC treatment resulted in reversal of DNA methylation marks induced by IDH and the re-expression of genes associated with differentiation. Accordingly, treatment of IDH1 mutant glioma cells resulted in a dramatic loss of stem-like properties and efficient adoption of markers of differentiation, effects not seen in decitabine treated IDH wild-type GICs. Induction of differentiation was much more efficient than that seen following treatment with a specific inhibitor of mutant IDH enzyme (Agios). Decitabine also decreased replicative potential and tumor growth in vivo. Reexpression of polycomb regulated genes accompanied these DAC-induced phenotypes. In total, our data indicates that targeting the pathologic DNA methylation in IDH mutant cells can reverse mutant IDH induced hypermethylation and block in differentiation and promote tumor control. These findings have substantial impact for exploring new treatment strategies for patients with IDH mutant gliomas.
Keywords: methylation; treatment; glioma; epigenetics; isocitrate dehydrogenase
Journal Title: Oncotarget
Volume: 4
Issue: 10
ISSN: 1949-2553
Publisher: Impact Journals  
Date Published: 2013-10-01
Start Page: 1729
End Page: 1736
Language: English
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 24077826
PMCID: PMC3858559
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Export Date: 2 December 2013" - "Source: Scopus"
Citation Impact
MSK Authors
  1. Timothy Chan
    317 Chan
  2. Cameron Brennan
    226 Brennan
  3. Jason T Huse
    143 Huse
  4. Agnes Viale
    245 Viale
  5. Armida Wanda Mathilde Fabius
    13 Fabius
  6. Sevin Turcan
    25 Turcan
  7. Alicia Maria Pedraza
    26 Pedraza