Abstract
Neuroblastoma (NB) represents a paradigmatic developmental malignancy in which lineage specification, oncogenic signalling, and epigenetic regulation converge to define tumour behaviour. Among the molecular axes shaping NB heterogeneity, neurotrophin receptors of the tropomyosin receptor kinase (Trk) family (TrkA, TrkB, and TrkC) and the p75NTR occupy a central position at the intersection between neuronal differentiation programs and malignant plasticity. While high TrkA and TrkC expression is associated with adrenergic identity, differentiation competence, and favourable clinical outcome, TrkB, frequently sustained by BDNF-driven autocrine loops, characterises mesenchymal-like, therapy-resistant states enriched in metabolic and inflammatory adaptations. Importantly, in NB, the dysregulation of neurotrophin signalling rarely arises from recurrent genetic alterations of neurotrophic tyrosine receptor kinase (NTRK) loci. Instead, Trk receptor expression is dynamically shaped by promoter methylation, polycomb repressive complex 2/Enhancer of Zeste homolog 2 (PRC2/EZH2)-dependent chromatin repression, MYCN-driven transcriptional silencing, enhancer rewiring, and microRNA-mediated control. These epigenetic mechanisms govern reversible transitions along the adrenergic-mesenchymal (ADRN-MES) continuum, enabling tumour cells to adapt to microenvironmental and therapeutic stress. Single-cell and spatial multi-omics approaches have further revealed that Trk-associated phenotypes are embedded within complex regulatory circuits integrating receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) networks, cytokine signalling, metabolic remodelling, and stromal reinforcement. Here, we provide a comprehensive synthesis of the epigenetic and microenvironmental mechanisms regulating neurotrophin receptors in NB, with particular emphasis on how chromatin plasticity and cell-state transitions reshape Trk-dependent signalling outputs. We discuss advanced three-dimensional and organoid-based models that recapitulate niche-specific regulation of the Trk axis and evaluate emerging therapeutic strategies combining epigenetic modulators, differentiation-inducing agents, and RTK-targeted compounds. Understanding the temporal and spatial dynamics of Trk signalling may open new opportunities to therapeutically stabilise differentiation states and disrupt adaptive resistance programs in high-risk NB.