| Literature DB >> 34261798 |
Stelios Chrysostomou1, Rajat Roy1, Filippo Prischi2,3, Lucksamon Thamlikitkul1,4, Kathryn L Chapman1,5, Uwais Mufti1, Robert Peach6,7, Laifeng Ding8, David Hancock9, Christopher Moore9, Miriam Molina-Arcas9, Francesco Mauri1, David J Pinato1, Joel M Abrahams1, Silvia Ottaviani1, Leandro Castellano1, Georgios Giamas10, Jennifer Pascoe11, Devmini Moonamale1, Sarah Pirrie12, Claire Gaunt12, Lucinda Billingham12, Neil M Steven11, Michael Cullen11, David Hrouda13, Mathias Winkler13, John Post14, Philip Cohen14, Seth J Salpeter15, Vered Bar15, Adi Zundelevich15, Shay Golan16, Dan Leibovici17, Romain Lara1,18, David R Klug6, Sophia N Yaliraki6, Mauricio Barahona19, Yulan Wang20, Julian Downward9, J Mark Skehel21, Maruf M U Ali22, Michael J Seckl23, Olivier E Pardo23.
Abstract
Lung and bladder cancers are mostly incurable because of the early development of drug resistance and metastatic dissemination. Hence, improved therapies that tackle these two processes are urgently needed to improve clinical outcome. We have identified RSK4 as a promoter of drug resistance and metastasis in lung and bladder cancer cells. Silencing this kinase, through either RNA interference or CRISPR, sensitized tumor cells to chemotherapy and hindered metastasis in vitro and in vivo in a tail vein injection model. Drug screening revealed several floxacin antibiotics as potent RSK4 activation inhibitors, and trovafloxacin reproduced all effects of RSK4 silencing in vitro and in/ex vivo using lung cancer xenograft and genetically engineered mouse models and bladder tumor explants. Through x-ray structure determination and Markov transient and Deuterium exchange analyses, we identified the allosteric binding site and revealed how this compound blocks RSK4 kinase activation through binding to an allosteric site and mimicking a kinase autoinhibitory mechanism involving the RSK4's hydrophobic motif. Last, we show that patients undergoing chemotherapy and adhering to prophylactic levofloxacin in the large placebo-controlled randomized phase 3 SIGNIFICANT trial had significantly increased (P = 0.048) long-term overall survival times. Hence, we suggest that RSK4 inhibition may represent an effective therapeutic strategy for treating lung and bladder cancer.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34261798 PMCID: PMC7611705 DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.aba4627
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Transl Med ISSN: 1946-6234 Impact factor: 17.956