Molecular Therapy: Nucleic Acids (Sep 2021)

Concurrent targeting of MAP3K3 and BRD4 by miR-3140-3p overcomes acquired resistance to BET inhibitors in neuroblastoma cells

  • Chang Liu,
  • Yasuyuki Gen,
  • Kousuke Tanimoto,
  • Tomoki Muramatsu,
  • Jun Inoue,
  • Johji Inazawa

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25
pp. 83 – 92

Abstract

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Neuroblastoma (NB) harboring MYCN amplification is a refractory disease with a poor prognosis. As BRD4, an epigenetic reader belonging to the bromodomain and extra terminal domain (BET) family, drives transcription of MYCN in NB cells, BET inhibitors (BETis) are considered useful for NB therapy. However, clinical trials of BETis suggested that early acquired resistance to BETis limits their therapeutic benefit. MicroRNAs are small non-coding RNAs that mediate post-transcriptional silencing of target genes. We previously identified miR-3140-3p as a potent candidate for nucleic acid therapeutics for cancer, which directly targets BRD4. We demonstrated that miR-3140-3p suppresses tumor cell growth in MYCN-amplified NB by downregulating MYCN and MYC through BRD4 suppression. We established BETi-acquired resistant NB cells to evaluate the mechanism of resistance to BETi in NB cells. We revealed that activated ERK1/2 stabilizes MYCN protein by preventing ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis via phosphorylation of MYCN at Ser62 in BETi-acquired resistant NB cells, thereby attenuating the effects of BETi in these cells. miR-3140-3p efficiently downregulated MYCN expression by directly targeting the MAP3K3-ERK1/2 pathway in addition to BRD4 suppression, inhibiting tumor cell growth in BETi-acquired resistant NB cells. This study suggests that miR-3140-3p has the potential to overcome resistance to BETi in NB.

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