- Luo, Zaili;
- Xin, Dazhuan;
- Liao, Yunfei;
- Berry, Kalen;
- Ogurek, Sean;
- Zhang, Feng;
- Zhang, Liguo;
- Zhao, Chuntao;
- Rao, Rohit;
- Dong, Xinran;
- Li, Hao;
- Yu, Jianzhong;
- Lin, Yifeng;
- Huang, Guoying;
- Xu, Lingli;
- Xin, Mei;
- Nishinakamura, Ryuichi;
- Yu, Jiyang;
- Kool, Marcel;
- Pfister, Stefan M;
- Roussel, Martine F;
- Zhou, Wenhao;
- Weiss, William A;
- Andreassen, Paul;
- Lu, Q Richard
MYC-driven medulloblastomas are highly aggressive childhood brain tumors, however, the molecular and genetic events triggering MYC amplification and malignant transformation remain elusive. Here we report that mutations in CTDNEP1, a CTD nuclear-envelope-phosphatase, are the most significantly enriched recurrent alterations in MYC-driven medulloblastomas, and define high-risk subsets with poorer prognosis. Ctdnep1 ablation promotes the transformation of murine cerebellar progenitors into Myc-amplified medulloblastomas, resembling their human counterparts. CTDNEP1 deficiency stabilizes and activates MYC activity by elevating MYC serine-62 phosphorylation, and triggers chromosomal instability to induce p53 loss and Myc amplifications. Further, phosphoproteomics reveals that CTDNEP1 post-translationally modulates the activities of key regulators for chromosome segregation and mitotic checkpoint regulators including topoisomerase TOP2A and checkpoint kinase CHEK1. Co-targeting MYC and CHEK1 activities synergistically inhibits CTDNEP1-deficient MYC-amplified tumor growth and prolongs animal survival. Together, our studies demonstrate that CTDNEP1 is a tumor suppressor in highly aggressive MYC-driven medulloblastomas by controlling MYC activity and mitotic fidelity, pointing to a CTDNEP1-dependent targetable therapeutic vulnerability.