| Literature DB >> 34388376 |
Kosuke Tanaka1, Helena A Yu2, Shaoyuan Yang1, Song Han1, S Duygu Selcuklu1, Kwanghee Kim3, Shriram Ramani1, Yogesh Tengarai Ganesan1, Allison Moyer4, Sonali Sinha1, Yuchen Xie5, Kota Ishizawa1, Hatice U Osmanbeyoglu6, Yang Lyu7, Nitin Roper8, Udayan Guha9, Charles M Rudin10, Mark G Kris2, James J Hsieh7, Emily H Cheng11.
Abstract
The clinical success of EGFR inhibitors in EGFR-mutant lung cancer is limited by the eventual development of acquired resistance. We hypothesize that enhancing apoptosis through combination therapies can eradicate cancer cells and reduce the emergence of drug-tolerant persisters. Through high-throughput screening of a custom library of ∼1,000 compounds, we discover Aurora B kinase inhibitors as potent enhancers of osimertinib-induced apoptosis. Mechanistically, Aurora B inhibition stabilizes BIM through reduced Ser87 phosphorylation, and transactivates PUMA through FOXO1/3. Importantly, osimertinib resistance caused by epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) activates the ATR-CHK1-Aurora B signaling cascade and thereby engenders hypersensitivity to respective kinase inhibitors by activating BIM-mediated mitotic catastrophe. Combined inhibition of EGFR and Aurora B not only efficiently eliminates cancer cells but also overcomes resistance beyond EMT.Entities:
Keywords: Aurora B kinase; BCL-2 family; EMT; apoptosis; drug resistance; drug tolerance; epidermal growth factor receptor; lineage plasticity; lung cancer; mitotic catastrophe
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34388376 PMCID: PMC8440494 DOI: 10.1016/j.ccell.2021.07.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Cell ISSN: 1535-6108 Impact factor: 38.585