Background: Children with diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG) succumb to disease within 2 years of diagnosis despite treatment with ionizing radiation (IR) and/or chemotherapy. Our aim was to determine the role of protein phosphatase, magnesium-dependent 1, delta (PPM1D) mutation, present in up to 25% of cases, in DIPG pathogenesis and treatment.
Methods: Using genetic and pharmacologic approaches, we assayed effects of PPM1D mutation on DIPG growth and murine survival. We assayed effects of targeting mutated PPM1D alone or with IR on signaling, cell cycle, proliferation, and apoptosis in patient-derived DIPG cells in vitro, in organotypic brain slices, and in vivo.
Results: PPM1D-mutated DIPG cell lines exhibited increased proliferation in vitro and in vivo, conferring reduced survival in orthotopically xenografted mice, through stabilization of truncated PPM1D protein and inactivation of DNA damage response (DDR) effectors p53 and H2A.X. PPM1D knockdown or treatment with PPM1D inhibitors suppressed growth of PPM1D-mutated DIPGs in vitro. Orthotopic xenografting of PPM1D short hairpin RNA-transduced or PPM1D inhibitor-treated, PPM1D-mutated DIPG cells into immunodeficient mice resulted in reduced tumor proliferation, increased apoptosis, and extended mouse survival. PPM1D inhibition had similar effects to IR alone on DIPG growth inhibition and augmented the anti-proliferative and pro-apoptotic effects of IR in PPM1D-mutated DIPG models.
Conclusions: PPM1D mutations inactivate DDR and promote DIPG growth. Treatment with PPM1D inhibitors activated DDR pathways and enhanced the anti-proliferative and pro-apoptotic effects of IR in DIPG models. Our results support continued development of PPM1D inhibitors for phase I/II trials in children with DIPG.
Keywords: PPM1D; WIP1; DIPG; DNA damage response; GSK2830371.
© The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Neuro-Oncology. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.