| Literature DB >> 28963352 |
Clare F Malone1,2, Chloe Emerson1,2, Rachel Ingraham1,2, William Barbosa1,2, Stephanie Guerra1,2, Haejin Yoon3, Lin L Liu4, Franziska Michor4, Marcia Haigis3, Kay F Macleod5, Ophélia Maertens1,2,6, Karen Cichowski7,2,6.
Abstract
Although agents that inhibit specific oncogenic kinases have been successful in a subset of cancers, there are currently few treatment options for malignancies that lack a targetable oncogenic driver. Nevertheless, during tumor evolution cancers engage a variety of protective pathways, which may provide alternative actionable dependencies. Here, we identify a promising combination therapy that kills NF1-mutant tumors by triggering catastrophic oxidative stress. Specifically, we show that mTOR and HDAC inhibitors kill aggressive nervous system malignancies and shrink tumors in vivo by converging on the TXNIP/thioredoxin antioxidant pathway, through cooperative effects on chromatin and transcription. Accordingly, TXNIP triggers cell death by inhibiting thioredoxin and activating apoptosis signal-regulating kinase 1 (ASK1). Moreover, this drug combination also kills NF1-mutant and KRAS-mutant non-small cell lung cancers. Together, these studies identify a promising therapeutic combination for several currently untreatable malignancies and reveal a protective nodal point of convergence between these important epigenetic and oncogenic enzymes.Significance: There are no effective therapies for NF1- or RAS-mutant cancers. We show that combined mTOR/HDAC inhibitors kill these RAS-driven tumors by causing catastrophic oxidative stress. This study identifies a promising therapeutic combination and demonstrates that selective enhancement of oxidative stress may be more broadly exploited for developing cancer therapies. Cancer Discov; 7(12); 1450-63. ©2017 AACR.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1355. ©2017 American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28963352 PMCID: PMC5718976 DOI: 10.1158/2159-8290.CD-17-0177
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Discov ISSN: 2159-8274 Impact factor: 39.397