作者
Peiran Su,Yin Liu,Tian-Yi Chen,Yibo Xue,Yong Zeng,Guanghui Zhu,Sujun Chen,Mona Teng,Xinpei Ci,Mengdi Guo,Michael Y. He,Jun Hao,Vivian Chu,Wenxi Xu,Shiyan Wang,Parinaz Mehdipour,Xin Xu,Alexander Solovyov,Fraser Soares,Nhu‐An Pham,Bell Xi Wu,Peter Hyunwuk Her,Shengrui Feng,Najd Alshamlan,Maryam Khalil,R. Krishnan,Fangyou Yu,Chang Chen,Francis Burrows,Razqallah Hakem,Mathieu Lupien,Shane M. Harding,Benjamin H. Lok,Catherine O’Brien,Alejandro Berlín,Daniel D. De Carvalho,David G. Brooks,Daniel Schramek,Ming‐Sound Tsao,Housheng Hansen He
摘要
Functional genomic screens in two-dimensional cell culture models are limited in identifying therapeutic targets that influence the tumor microenvironment. By comparing targeted CRISPR–Cas9 screens in a two-dimensional culture with xenografts derived from the same cell line, we identified MEN1 as the top hit that confers differential dropout effects in vitro and in vivo. MEN1 knockout in multiple solid cancer types does not impact cell proliferation in vitro but significantly promotes or inhibits tumor growth in immunodeficient or immunocompetent mice, respectively. Mechanistically, MEN1 knockout redistributes MLL1 chromatin occupancy, increasing H3K4me3 at repetitive genomic regions, activating double-stranded RNA expression and increasing neutrophil and CD8+ T cell infiltration in immunodeficient and immunocompetent mice, respectively. Pharmacological inhibition of the menin–MLL interaction reduces tumor growth in a CD8+ T cell-dependent manner. These findings reveal tumor microenvironment-dependent oncogenic and tumor-suppressive functions of MEN1 and provide a rationale for targeting MEN1 in solid cancers. Loss of MEN1 affects tumor growth, varing with the components of the tumor microenvironment. These tumors show redistribution of MLL1 on chromatin and the activation of a viral mimicry response.