Translation of non-canonical open reading frames as a cancer cell survival mechanism in childhood medulloblastoma

bioRxiv [Preprint]. 2023 May 6:2023.05.04.539399. doi: 10.1101/2023.05.04.539399.

Abstract

A hallmark of high-risk childhood medulloblastoma is the dysregulation of RNA translation. Currently, it is unknown whether medulloblastoma dysregulates the translation of putatively oncogenic non-canonical open reading frames. To address this question, we performed ribosome profiling of 32 medulloblastoma tissues and cell lines and observed widespread non-canonical ORF translation. We then developed a step-wise approach to employ multiple CRISPR-Cas9 screens to elucidate functional non-canonical ORFs implicated in medulloblastoma cell survival. We determined that multiple lncRNA-ORFs and upstream open reading frames (uORFs) exhibited selective functionality independent of the main coding sequence. One of these, ASNSD1-uORF or ASDURF, was upregulated, associated with the MYC family oncogenes, and was required for medulloblastoma cell survival through engagement with the prefoldin-like chaperone complex. Our findings underscore the fundamental importance of non-canonical ORF translation in medulloblastoma and provide a rationale to include these ORFs in future cancer genomics studies seeking to define new cancer targets.

Keywords: CRISPR; Cancer; Ribo-seq; gene dependency; lncRNAs; medulloblastoma; non-canonical ORFs; translational regulation; uORF.

Publication types

  • Preprint