TY - JOUR
T1 - Genome-scale functional genomics identify genes preferentially essential for multiple myeloma cells compared to other neoplasias
AU - de Matos Simoes, Ricardo
AU - Shirasaki, Ryosuke
AU - Downey-Kopyscinski, Sondra L.
AU - Matthews, Geoffrey M.
AU - Barwick, Benjamin G.
AU - Gupta, Vikas A.
AU - Dupéré-Richer, Daphné
AU - Yamano, Shizuka
AU - Hu, Yiguo
AU - Sheffer, Michal
AU - Dhimolea, Eugen
AU - Dashevsky, Olga
AU - Gandolfi, Sara
AU - Ishiguro, Kazuya
AU - Meyers, Robin M.
AU - Bryan, Jordan G.
AU - Dharia, Neekesh V.
AU - Hengeveld, Paul J.
AU - Brüggenthies, Johanna B.
AU - Tang, Huihui
AU - Aguirre, Andrew J.
AU - Sievers, Quinlan L.
AU - Ebert, Benjamin L.
AU - Glassner, Brian J.
AU - Ott, Christopher J.
AU - Bradner, James E.
AU - Kwiatkowski, Nicholas P.
AU - Auclair, Daniel
AU - Levy, Joan
AU - Keats, Jonathan J.
AU - Groen, Richard W.J.
AU - Gray, Nathanael S.
AU - Culhane, Aedin C.
AU - McFarland, James M.
AU - Dempster, Joshua M.
AU - Licht, Jonathan D.
AU - Boise, Lawrence H.
AU - Hahn, William C.
AU - Vazquez, Francisca
AU - Tsherniak, Aviad
AU - Mitsiades, Constantine S.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature America, Inc.
PY - 2023/5
Y1 - 2023/5
N2 - Clinical progress in multiple myeloma (MM), an incurable plasma cell (PC) neoplasia, has been driven by therapies that have limited applications beyond MM/PC neoplasias and do not target specific oncogenic mutations in MM. Instead, these agents target pathways critical for PC biology yet largely dispensable for malignant or normal cells of most other lineages. Here we systematically characterized the lineage-preferential molecular dependencies of MM through genome-scale clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR) studies in 19 MM versus hundreds of non-MM lines and identified 116 genes whose disruption more significantly affects MM cell fitness compared with other malignancies. These genes, some known, others not previously linked to MM, encode transcription factors, chromatin modifiers, endoplasmic reticulum components, metabolic regulators or signaling molecules. Most of these genes are not among the top amplified, overexpressed or mutated in MM. Functional genomics approaches thus define new therapeutic targets in MM not readily identifiable by standard genomic, transcriptional or epigenetic profiling analyses.
AB - Clinical progress in multiple myeloma (MM), an incurable plasma cell (PC) neoplasia, has been driven by therapies that have limited applications beyond MM/PC neoplasias and do not target specific oncogenic mutations in MM. Instead, these agents target pathways critical for PC biology yet largely dispensable for malignant or normal cells of most other lineages. Here we systematically characterized the lineage-preferential molecular dependencies of MM through genome-scale clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR) studies in 19 MM versus hundreds of non-MM lines and identified 116 genes whose disruption more significantly affects MM cell fitness compared with other malignancies. These genes, some known, others not previously linked to MM, encode transcription factors, chromatin modifiers, endoplasmic reticulum components, metabolic regulators or signaling molecules. Most of these genes are not among the top amplified, overexpressed or mutated in MM. Functional genomics approaches thus define new therapeutic targets in MM not readily identifiable by standard genomic, transcriptional or epigenetic profiling analyses.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85160376656&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1038/s43018-023-00550-x
DO - 10.1038/s43018-023-00550-x
M3 - Article
C2 - 37237081
AN - SCOPUS:85160376656
SN - 2662-1347
VL - 4
SP - 754
EP - 773
JO - Nature Cancer
JF - Nature Cancer
IS - 5
ER -