MCL-1 inhibition provides a new way to suppress breast cancer metastasis and increase sensitivity to dasatinib

Metastatic disease is largely resistant to therapy and accounts for almost all cancer deaths. Myeloid cell leukemia-1 (MCL-1) is an important regulator of cell survival and chemo-resistance in a wide range of malignancies, and thus its inhibition may prove to be therapeutically useful. To examine wh...

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Veröffentlicht in:Breast cancer research : BCR 2016-12, Vol.18 (1), p.125-125, Article 125
Hauptverfasser: Young, Adelaide I J, Law, Andrew M K, Castillo, Lesley, Chong, Sabrina, Cullen, Hayley D, Koehler, Martin, Herzog, Sebastian, Brummer, Tilman, Lee, Erinna F, Fairlie, Walter D, Lucas, Morghan C, Herrmann, David, Allam, Amr, Timpson, Paul, Watkins, D Neil, Millar, Ewan K A, O'Toole, Sandra A, Gallego-Ortega, David, Ormandy, Christopher J, Oakes, Samantha R
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Metastatic disease is largely resistant to therapy and accounts for almost all cancer deaths. Myeloid cell leukemia-1 (MCL-1) is an important regulator of cell survival and chemo-resistance in a wide range of malignancies, and thus its inhibition may prove to be therapeutically useful. To examine whether targeting MCL-1 may provide an effective treatment for breast cancer, we constructed inducible models of BIMs2A expression (a specific MCL-1 inhibitor) in MDA-MB-468 (MDA-MB-468-2A) and MDA-MB-231 (MDA-MB-231-2A) cells. MCL-1 inhibition caused apoptosis of basal-like MDA-MB-468-2A cells grown as monolayers, and sensitized them to the BCL-2/BCL-XL inhibitor ABT-263, demonstrating that MCL-1 regulated cell survival. In MDA-MB-231-2A cells, grown in an organotypic model, induction of BIMs2A produced an almost complete suppression of invasion. Apoptosis was induced in such a small proportion of these cells that it could not account for the large decrease in invasion, suggesting that MCL-1 was operating via a previously undetected mechanism. MCL-1 antagonism also suppressed local invasion and distant metastasis to the lung in mouse mammary intraductal xenografts. Kinomic profiling revealed that MCL-1 antagonism modulated Src family kinases and their targets, which suggested that MCL-1 might act as an upstream modulator of invasion via this pathway. Inhibition of MCL-1 in combination with dasatinib suppressed invasion in 3D models of invasion and inhibited the establishment of tumors in vivo. These data provide the first evidence that MCL-1 drives breast cancer cell invasion and suggests that MCL-1 antagonists could be used alone or in combination with drugs targeting Src kinases such as dasatinib to suppress metastasis.
ISSN:1465-542X
1465-5411
1465-542X
DOI:10.1186/s13058-016-0781-6