Investigator

Reid T. Powell

Post Doc · Texas A&M University, Center For Translational Cancer Research

RTPReid T. Powell
Papers(1)
Gain-of-Function Chro…
Collaborators(10)
R. Tyler HillmanShiro TakamatsuThomas WelteVeena K. VuttaradhiAlejandra Flores Lega…Allison L. BrodskyAnil K. SoodBarrett C. LawsonClifford StephanDavid M. Gershenson
Institutions(5)
Unknown InstitutionUC San Diego Health S…Kyoto UniversityThe University Of Tex…Texas A&M Health Scie…

Papers

Gain-of-Function Chromatin Remodeling Activity of Oncogenic FOXL2C134W Reprograms Glucocorticoid Receptor Occupancy to Drive Granulosa Cell Tumors

Abstract Adult type ovarian granulosa cell tumors (AGCT) are rare malignancies with the near universal c.C402G (p.Cys134Trp) somatic mutation in FOXL2, a forkhead box family transcription factor important for ovarian function. Relapsed AGCT is incurable, but the mechanism of the unique FOXL2 mutation could confer therapeutic vulnerabilities. To identify FOXL2C134W-dependent pharmacologic synergies, we created and characterized endogenous FOXL2 isogenic AGCT cells and an AGCT tumoroid biobank. A drug screen identified that glucocorticoids promote FOXL2C134W-dependent AGCT growth. Epigenetic investigation revealed that the Cys134Trp mutation exposes latent DNA sequence–specific chromatin remodeling activity in FOXL2. FOXL2C134W-dependent chromatin remodeling activity redirected glucocorticoid receptor chromatin occupancy to drive hyaluronan synthase 2 gene expression and increase extracellular hyaluronan secretion. Treatment of AGCT models with hyaluronidase reduced viability, and dexamethasone rescued this effect. Combinatorial drug–drug interaction experiments demonstrated that dexamethasone antagonizes the potency of paclitaxel, a chemotherapy agent frequently used in the treatment of AGCT. Thus, gain-of-function pioneering activity contributes to the oncogenic mechanism of FOXL2C134W and creates a potentially targetable synergy with glucocorticoid signaling. Significance: Glucocorticoids promote granulosa cell tumor growth via epigenetic coregulation with the disease driver FOXL2C134W, providing mechanistic insight into disease oncogenesis and uncovering a potential treatment strategy.

119Works
1Papers
16Collaborators
Cell Line, TumorGranulosa Cell TumorOvarian NeoplasmsColonic NeoplasmsColorectal NeoplasmsApoptosisPapillomavirus Infections

Positions

Post Doc

Texas A&M University · Center For Translational Cancer Research

2020–

Research Assistant Professor

Texas A&M University · Translational Medical Science

Education

PhD, Medical Science

Texas A&M University College Station

BS Biochemistry

Texas Tech University · Chemistry and Biochemistry

Links & IDs
0000-0002-6242-8315

Scopus: 56226757800