Document Type
Article
Publication Date
12-22-2025
Publication Title
Biology
Abstract
Neuroblastoma (NB), a pediatric cancer of sympatho-adrenal (SA) lineage, is marked by disrupted differentiation and cellular heterogeneity. INSM1, a zinc-finger transcription factor, is highly expressed in NB and developing SA tissues, where it regulates neuroendocrine differentiation, especially in chromaffin cells. We investigated INSM1's role in maintaining an undifferentiated, progenitor-like state in NB and its regulation via metabolic and epigenetic mechanisms. Transcriptomic profiling, promoter assays, and metabolic flux analysis revealed that INSM1 expression correlates with methionine cycle activity, particularly the S-adenosylmethionine (SAM)/S-adenosylhomocysteine (SAH) ratio. Disruption of SAM/SAH balance altered INSM1 promoter activity and histone methylation, implicating epigenetic control in NB cell fate. Retinoic acid-induced differentiation downregulated INSM1 and N-Myc, linking INSM1 to tumor cell immaturity. INSM1 overexpression in SH-SY-5Y cells upregulated neuroendocrine and thyroid hormone-related genes (CHGA, CHGB, DDC, NCAM1, DIO3, TH), while suppressing genes involved in cell cycle (RRM, CDC25A), methionine metabolism (AHCY, MAT2A), transcriptional regulation (MYBL2, EZH2), and oncogenic signaling (ALK, LINC011667). These findings suggest that INSM1 promotes NB aggressiveness by sustaining a neuroendocrine progenitor-like phenotype through metabolic-epigenetic coupling.
PubMed ID
41514864
Volume
15
Issue
1
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Recommended Citation
Chen, Chiachen; Cheng, Siyuan; Yu, Xiuping; Lee, Yisheng; and Lan, Michael S., "Regulation of INSM1 Gene Expression and Neuroendocrine Differentiation in High-Risk Neuroblastoma" (2025). School of Graduate Studies Faculty Publications. 487.
https://digitalscholar.lsuhsc.edu/sogs_facpubs/487
10.3390/biology15010022
Included in
Endocrine System Diseases Commons, Medical Biochemistry Commons, Medical Genetics Commons, Neoplasms Commons, Pediatrics Commons