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Differentiation-state plasticity is a targetable resistance mechanism in basal-like breast cancer

177

Citations

71

References

2018

Year

TLDR

Intratumoral heterogeneity driven by genomic instability and epigenomic plasticity underlies resistance to cytotoxic and targeted therapies. In triple‑negative and basal‑like breast cancers, drug‑tolerant persister cells arise via distinct chromatin‑remodeling transitions driven by MEK or PI3K/mTOR inhibition, and combined PI3K/mTOR and BET inhibition blocks these transitions, inducing cell death and tumor regression.

Abstract

Abstract Intratumoral heterogeneity in cancers arises from genomic instability and epigenomic plasticity and is associated with resistance to cytotoxic and targeted therapies. We show here that cell-state heterogeneity, defined by differentiation-state marker expression, is high in triple-negative and basal-like breast cancer subtypes, and that drug tolerant persister (DTP) cell populations with altered marker expression emerge during treatment with a wide range of pathway-targeted therapeutic compounds. We show that MEK and PI3K/mTOR inhibitor-driven DTP states arise through distinct cell-state transitions rather than by Darwinian selection of preexisting subpopulations, and that these transitions involve dynamic remodeling of open chromatin architecture. Increased activity of many chromatin modifier enzymes, including BRD4, is observed in DTP cells. Co-treatment with the PI3K/mTOR inhibitor BEZ235 and the BET inhibitor JQ1 prevents changes to the open chromatin architecture, inhibits the acquisition of a DTP state, and results in robust cell death in vitro and xenograft regression in vivo.

References

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