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Pharmacological targeting of EED is an effective therapeutic strategy in cellular models of incurable neuroendocrine prostate cancer

Orchard, K. J.; Bryant, G.; Latarani, M.; Misir, I. R.; Yerra, S. M.; Velanis, C.; Banchi, M.; Fischetti, I.; Turnball, S. L.; Eccleston, M.; Kelly, T. K.; Burke, E.; Maylin, Z. R.; Bocci, G.; Shamash, J.; Berney, D.; Brentnall, A.; Akamatsu, S.; Lin, D.; Lu, Y.-J.; Jachetti, E.; Wang, Y.; Crea, F. M.

2026-02-25 cancer biology
10.64898/2026.02.24.707688 bioRxiv
Show abstract

BackgroundNeuroendocrine Prostate Cancer (NEPC) is an incurable malignancy, originating from the trans-differentiation of prostate adenocarcinoma (PRAD). Compared to PRAD, NEPC shows over-activation of Polycomb Repressive complex-1(PRC1) and-2 (PRC2), which are multiprotein epigenetic writers that drive cancer progression via tumour suppressor gene silencing. Tazemetostat is a PRC2 inhibitor approved for the treatment of sarcomas and lymphomas. ORIC-944 is a novel EED (Embryonic Ectoderm Development) inhibitor, which is being tested in clinical trials. EED is an attractive target as it functions as a key component of both PRC1 and PRC2. Objective and MethodsWe compared the anticancer effects of tazemetostat and ORIC-944 in NEPC and PRAD cells. Cells were exposed to various concentrations of the two compounds to measure effects on cell viability (IC50) and apoptosis (flow cytometry). PRC2 inhibition was confirmed by measuring histone H3 Lys 27 trimethylation (H3K27me3) via ELISA and Western Blot. RNA Sequencing and pathway analysis was conducted to study modes of actions of tazemetostat vs ORIC-944. ResultsUnlike tazemetostat, ORIC-944 causes dose-dependent growth inhibition in both NEPC and PRAD cells. In this context, EED targeting achieves IC50 values that are comparable to those of compounds used for the clinical treatment of advanced prostate cancer. Moreover, ORIC-944 (but not tazemetostat) causes significant apoptosis in NEPC cells. Both tazemetostat and ORIC-944 reduce H3K27me3. Mechanistically, both compounds reactivate the expression of known PRC2 targets, such as genes that control neural differentiation. However, the EED inhibitor also reactivates PRC1 targets, including pro-apoptotic and anti-proliferating genes (e.g. metallothionines). This evidence suggests that EED inhibition is a promising therapeutic strategy for NEPC.

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