Epigenetic heterogeneity promotes acquired resistance to BET bromodomain inhibition in ovarian cancer

BET bromodomain inhibitors (BETi) are promising therapeutic regimens for epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC). However, early-stage clinical trials indicate that drug tolerance may limit their anti-tumor efficacy. Here, we show that JQ1-refractory EOC cells acquire reversible resistance to BET inhibition...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of cancer research 2021-01, Vol.11 (6), p.3021-3038
Hauptverfasser: Sun, Yunheng, Zhang, Zhenfeng, Zhang, Ke, Liu, Yuxia, Shen, Peiye, Cai, Meichun, Jia, Chenqiang, Wang, Wenjing, Gu, Zhuowei, Ma, Pengfei, Lu, Huaiwu, Guan, Lei, Di, Wen, Zhuang, Guanglei, Yin, Xia
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:BET bromodomain inhibitors (BETi) are promising therapeutic regimens for epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC). However, early-stage clinical trials indicate that drug tolerance may limit their anti-tumor efficacy. Here, we show that JQ1-refractory EOC cells acquire reversible resistance to BET inhibition and remain dependent on BRD4 function. The insensitivity is driven by a unique non-genetic mechanism that involves clonal selection for a pre-existing cell subpopulation with ample acetylated histones and sufficient nuclear phase-separated BRD4 droplets to counteract BETi antagonism. A vertical combination approach by co-blocking BET proteins and downstream Aurora kinases proves to achieve more complete responses than single inhibitors. Collectively, our study implicates epigenetic heterogeneity in therapeutic resistance to chromatin-targeted agents and proposes a rational strategy to address this anticipated clinical dilemma.
ISSN:2156-6976
2156-6976