1. Academic Validation
  2. Inhibition of USP7 destabilizes the noncanonical PRC1.1 complex and induces neuroblastoma differentiation

Inhibition of USP7 destabilizes the noncanonical PRC1.1 complex and induces neuroblastoma differentiation

  • Mol Cancer Res. 2026 Mar 19:10.1158/1541-7786.MCR-25-1153. doi: 10.1158/1541-7786.MCR-25-1153.
Emily A Cmarik 1 Abhishek Wahi 1 Sayali S Chandekar 1 Solomon K Otchere 2 Jennifer E Sturgis 1 Silvi Salhotra 3 Allen T Basanthakumar 3 Nehemiah X Boyd 2 Giulia DiGiovanni 4 He Zhu 5 Gabriela Alexe 6 Daniel A Schaefer 7 Xing Liu 8 Jarrod A Marto 9 Sara J Buhrlage 10 Kimberly Stegmaier 6 Nathaniel W Mabe 11
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Purdue University West Lafayette United States.
  • 2 Purdue University West Lafayette West Lafayette, Indiana United States.
  • 3 Dana-Farber Cancer Institute Boston United States.
  • 4 Dana-Farber Cancer Institute United States.
  • 5 University of Virginia Charlottesville, Virginia United States.
  • 6 Dana-Farber Cancer Institute Boston, MA United States.
  • 7 Massachusetts General Hospital United States.
  • 8 Purdue University West Lafayette West Lafayette United States.
  • 9 University of Virginia Charlottesville, VA United States.
  • 10 Dana-Farber Cancer Institute Boston, Massachusetts United States.
  • 11 Purdue University West Lafayette West Lafayette, IN United States.
Abstract

Pediatric cancers are frequently driven by genomic alterations that result in impaired differentiation during development. To identify complex-level dependencies required for differentiation in neuroblastoma, a pediatric Cancer of the developing peripheral nervous system, we curated a list of protein complexes using the CORUM database and mined the Dependency Map (DepMap) using gene set enrichment analysis. This analysis identified the non-canonical PRC1.1 complex, which represses transcriptional activity through ubiquitination of histone 2A, lysine 119 (H2AK119Ub), as a selectively enriched dependency in neuroblastoma. Knockout of PRC1.1 subunits reduced neuroblastoma growth by inducing a neuronal differentiation program. While no known direct inhibitors of PRC1.1 exist, co-dependency analysis identified that the Deubiquitinase USP7 strongly correlated with PRC1.1 dependency. Treatment with XL177A, a small molecule inhibitor of USP7, significantly reduced neuroblastoma growth in both cellular and animal models. Integrated RNA- and ChIP-sequencing showed that both PRC1.1 knockout and USP7 inhibition resulted in highly correlated transcriptional alterations and reduced H2AK119Ub deposition on chromatin, suggesting that USP7 inhibition reduced neuroblastoma growth through a PRC1.1-dependent mechanism. Mechanistically, global proteomics and ubiquitinomics revealed that USP7 inhibition disrupted non-canonical PRC1 complex assembly, resulting in destabilization of PRC1.1 and subsequent proteolysis. Our findings expand our understanding of the chromatin complexes required to maintain a de-differentiated state in neuroblastoma and suggest the therapeutic potential for USP7 inhibitors in the treatment of this disease. Implications: Our study reveals the potential for utilizing USP7 inhibitors to target epigenetic repression of differentiation programs in neuroblastoma by reducing PRC1 activity.

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