Molecular Therapy: Nucleic Acids (Sep 2020)

MYC ASO Impedes Tumorigenesis and Elicits Oncogene Addiction in Autochthonous Transgenic Mouse Models of HCC and RCC

  • Renumathy Dhanasekaran,
  • Jangho Park,
  • Alekesey Yevtodiyenko,
  • David I. Bellovin,
  • Stacey J. Adam,
  • Anand Rajan KD,
  • Meital Gabay,
  • Hanan Fernando,
  • Julia Arzeno,
  • Vinodhini Arjunan,
  • Sergei Gryanzov,
  • Dean W. Felsher

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21
pp. 850 – 859

Abstract

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The MYC oncogene is dysregulated in most human cancers and hence is an attractive target for cancer therapy. We and others have shown experimentally in conditional transgenic mouse models that suppression of the MYC oncogene is sufficient to induce rapid and sustained tumor regression, a phenomenon known as oncogene addiction. However, it is unclear whether a therapy that targets the MYC oncogene could similarly elicit oncogene addiction. In this study, we report that using antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) to target and reduce the expression of MYC impedes tumor progression and phenotypically elicits oncogene addiction in transgenic mouse models of MYC-driven primary hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and renal cell carcinoma (RCC). Quantitative image analysis of MRI was used to demonstrate the inhibition of HCC and RCC progression. After 4 weeks of drug treatment, tumors had regressed histologically. ASOs depleted MYC mRNA and protein expression in primary tumors in vivo, as demonstrated by real-time PCR and immunohistochemistry. Treatment with MYC ASO in vivo, but not with a control ASO, decreased proliferation, induced apoptosis, increased senescence, and remodeled the tumor microenvironment by recruitment of CD4+ T cells. Importantly, although MYC ASO reduced both mouse Myc and transgenic human MYC, the ASO was not associated with significant toxicity. Lastly, we demonstrate that MYC ASO inhibits the growth of human liver cancer xenografts in vivo. Our results illustrate that targeting MYC expression in vivo using ASO can suppress tumorigenesis by phenotypically eliciting both tumor-intrinsic and microenvironment hallmarks of oncogene addiction. Hence, MYC ASO therapy is a promising strategy to treat MYC-driven human cancers.

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