Therapeutic rationale to target highly expressed CDK7 conferring poor outcomes in triple-negative breast cancer
Li, Bo; Chonghaile, Triona Ni; Fan, Yue; Madden, Stephen F.; Klinger, Rut; O'Connor, Aisling E.; Walsh, Louise; O'Hurley, Gillian; Udupi, Girish Mallya; Joseph, Jesuchristopher; Tarrant, Finbarr; Conroy, Emer; Gaber, Alexander; Chin, Suet-Feung; Bardwell, Helen A; Provenzano, Elena; Crown, John; Dubois, Thierry; Linn, Sabine; Jirstrom, Karin; Caldas, Carlos; O'Connor, Darran P; Gallagher, William M
(2017) Cancer Research, volume 77, issue 14, pp. 3834 - 3845
(Article)
Abstract
Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) patients commonly exhibit poor prognosis and high relapse after treatment, but there remains a lack of biomarkers and effective targeted therapies for this disease. Here, we report evidence highlighting the cell-cycle–related kinase CDK7 as a driver and candidate therapeutic target in TNBC. Using publicly available transcriptomic
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data from a collated set of TNBC patients (n ¼ 383) and the METABRIC TNBC dataset (n ¼ 217), we found CDK7 mRNA levels to be correlated with patient prognosis. High CDK7 protein expression was associated with poor prognosis within the RATHER TNBC cohort (n ¼ 109) and the METABRIC TNBC cohort (n ¼ 203). The highly specific CDK7 kinase inhibitors, BS-181 and THZ1, each downregulated CDK7-mediated phosphorylation of RNA polymerase II, indicative of transcriptional inhibition, with THZ1 exhibiting 500-fold greater potency than BS-181. Mechanistic investigations revealed that the survival of MDA-MB-231 TNBC cells relied heavily on the BCL-2/BCL-XL signaling axes in cells. Accordingly, we found that combining the BCL-2/BCL-XL inhibitors ABT-263/ABT199 with the CDK7 inhibitor THZ1 synergized in producing growth inhibition and apoptosis of human TNBC cells. Collectively, our results highlight elevated CDK7 expression as a candidate biomarker of poor prognosis in TNBC, and they offer a preclinical proof of concept for combining CDK7 and BCL-2/BCL-XL inhibitors as a mechanism-based therapeutic strategy to improve TNBC treatment.
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Keywords: Oncology, Cancer Research, Journal Article
ISSN: 0008-5472
Publisher: American Association for Cancer Research Inc.
Note: Funding Information: We thank all members of the RATHER consortium, in particular Prof. Rene Bernards from the Netherlands Cancer Institute (Amsterdam, the Netherlands), who provided constructive suggestions for this study. We also thank Dr. Nathanael Gray from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute (Boston, MA) for the kind gift of the THZ1 inhibitor. This studywas supported by RATHER (Rational Therapy for Breast Cancer), a Collaborative Project funded under the European Union 7th Framework Programme (grant agreement no. 258967), the Irish Cancer Society Collaborative Cancer Research Centre BREAST-PREDICT (CCRC13GAL), and the Science Foundation Ireland Investigator Programme OPTi-PREDICT (grant code 15/IA/3104). Publisher Copyright: 2017 American Association for Cancer Research.
(Peer reviewed)