| Literature DB >> 30026381 |
Megan Buechel1, Anindya Dey1, Shailendra Kumar Dhar Dwivedi1, Aleia Crim1, Kai Ding2, Roy Zhang3, Priyabrata Mukherjee3, Kathleen N Moore1, Liangxian Cao4, Arthur Branstrom4, Marla Weetall4, John Baird4, Resham Bhattacharya5,6.
Abstract
With rising incidence rates, endometrial cancer is one of the most common gynecologic malignancies in the United States. Although surgery provides significant survival benefit to early-stage patients, those with advanced or recurrent metastatic disease have a dismal prognosis. Limited treatment options include chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Hence, there is a compelling need for developing molecularly targeted therapy. Here, we show that the polycomb ring finger protein BMI1, also known as a stem cell factor, is significantly overexpressed in endometrial cancer cell lines, endometrial cancer patient tissues as well as in nonendometrioid histologies and associated with poor overall survival. PTC-028, a second-generation inhibitor of BMI1 function, decreases invasion of endometrial cancer cells and potentiates caspase-dependent apoptosis, while normal cells with minimal expression of BMI1 remain unaffected. In an aggressive uterine carcinosarcoma xenograft model, single-agent PTC-028 significantly delayed tumor growth and increased tumor doubling time compared with the standard carboplatin/paclitaxel therapy. Therefore, anti-BMI1 strategies may represent a promising targeted approach in patients with advanced or recurrent endometrial cancer, a population where treatment options are limited. Mol Cancer Ther; 17(10); 2136-43. ©2018 AACR. ©2018 American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30026381 PMCID: PMC7285980 DOI: 10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-17-1192
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cancer Ther ISSN: 1535-7163 Impact factor: 6.261