A chemogenomic screening identifies CK2 as a target for pro-senescence therapy in PTEN-deficient tumours

Enhancement of cellular senescence in tumours triggers a stable cell growth arrest and activation of an antitumour immune response that can be exploited for cancer therapy. Currently, there are only a limited number of targeted therapies that act by increasing senescence in cancers, but the majority...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2015-06, Vol.6 (1), p.7227-7227, Article 7227
Hauptverfasser: Kalathur, Madhuri, Toso, Alberto, Chen, Jingjing, Revandkar, Ajinkya, Danzer-Baltzer, Claudia, Guccini, Ilaria, Alajati, Abdullah, Sarti, Manuela, Pinton, Sandra, Brambilla, Lara, Di Mitri, Diletta, Carbone, Giuseppina, Garcia-Escudero, R, Padova, Alessandro, Magnoni, Letizia, Tarditi, Alessia, Maccari, Laura, Malusa, Federico, Kalathur, Ravi Kiran Reddy, A. Pinna, Lorenzo, Cozza, Giorgio, Ruzzene, Maria, Delaleu, Nicolas, Catapano, Carlo V., Frew, Ian J., Alimonti, Andrea
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Enhancement of cellular senescence in tumours triggers a stable cell growth arrest and activation of an antitumour immune response that can be exploited for cancer therapy. Currently, there are only a limited number of targeted therapies that act by increasing senescence in cancers, but the majority of them are not selective and also target healthy cells. Here we developed a chemogenomic screening to identify compounds that enhance senescence in PTEN-deficient cells without affecting normal cells. By using this approach, we identified casein kinase 2 (CK2) as a pro-senescent target. Mechanistically, we show that Pten loss increases CK2 levels by activating STAT3. CK2 upregulation in Pten null tumours affects the stability of Pml, an essential regulator of senescence. However, CK2 inhibition stabilizes Pml levels enhancing senescence in Pten null tumours. Taken together, our screening strategy has identified a novel STAT3–CK2–PML network that can be targeted for pro-senescence therapy for cancer. It has been proposed that the identification of genes regulating senescence in the absence of PTEN might help develop pro-senescence compounds for the treatment of cancer. Here, the authors use a combination of chemical and shRNA functional screen and identify CK2 as a potential target.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/ncomms8227