Abstract IA23: Enhancer remodeling in response to MEK inhibition in TNBC

J. Zawistowski, Samantha M. Bevill, G. Johnson
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Rather than attempting to antagonize RTK upregulation using a secondary kinase inhibitor in conjunction with the initial, primary targeted therapeutic, we have employed a strategy to broadly inhibit MEKi-induced transcriptional adaptation through the use of BET bromodomain inhibitors. BET protein family bromodomains bind to acetylated lysine moieties of histone subunits or transcription factors to regulate transcriptional elongation via recruitment of P-TEFb, a RNA polymerase II regulatory complex containing CDK9 and Cyclin T1. In TNBC we found the combination of MEKi + BET bromodomain inhibition (BETi) resulted in durable tumor cell growth inhibition not obtained with trametinib alone, nor with different kinase inhibitor combinations. Importantly, we observed in vivo MEKi + BETi synergy in orthotopic SUM159PT xenograft and T11 and 2225 mouse orthotopic syngeneic transplant models of TNBC. This synergism is not limited to TNBC, as we have shown that MEKi + BETi results in durable growth suppression in HER2+ breast cancer. A central question is the mechanism of BETi efficacy in the context of suppressing adaptation to targeted therapeutics. We asked if BRD4 function at enhancers is critical for adaptive transcription in response to MEK1/2 inhibition by trametinib. We found vast chromatin remodeling in the form of de novo enhancer formation and remodeling in response to trametinib in TNBC cells. Enhancers with pronounced BRD4 density and co-occupied with prototypical enhancer marks (H3K27ac, MED1, H3K4me1) were rapidly (1-4 h) formed genome-wide, including at sites proximal to receptor tyrosine kinase loci including DDR1, KDR, FGFR2, and PDGFRB, each influential in TNBC adaptive resistance. Trametinib-responsive enhancers were remodeled across the genome, but with BETi the total number of enhancers remained near baseline. In fact, BETi was able to disrupt enhancers seeded in response to trametinib. We observed correlation of transcriptional induction of genes proximal to the enhancer density induced by trametinib and a corresponding correlative decrease in transcript levels of the cognate genes of the seeded enhancers with combination MEKi+BETi treatment. Does the enhancer paradigm provide a potential source of pharmacologic targets for attenuating adaptive transcription beyond that of BRD4? In addition to BETi, we found that pharmacologic perturbation of CBP/p300 acetyltransferase, capable of depositing acetylation at H3K27 of enhancers, or core P-TEFb constituent CDK9 abrogated adaptive RTK upregulation elicited by MEKi. BRD4 directly associates with the transcriptional regulator JMJD6, a JmjC family demethylase, and, accordingly, the use of a pan-JmjC family demethylase inhibitor or siRNA targeting JMJD6 diminished RTK adaption. Similar response abrogation was achieved with depletion of the histone H3 lysine 36 methyltransferase NSD3 or by depleting CDK7, whose transcriptional regulatory activity is conferred by phosphorylation of its substrates including CDK9 and the carboxy-terminal domain (CTD) of RNA polymerase II. While small-molecule inhibitors are currently not yet available or are pre-phase I for many of these purported strategies to block adaptive resistance, our preclinical data suggest that protein complexes of drug-induced enhancers may be a largely untapped frontier of epigenetic targets to block adaptive bypass resistance to targeted therapies. Citation Format: Jon Zawistowski, Samantha Bevill, Gary L. Johnson. Enhancer remodeling in response to MEK inhibition in TNBC [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the AACR Special Conference: Advances in Breast Cancer Research; 2017 Oct 7-10; Hollywood, CA. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

In contrast to acquired resistance to targeted therapeutics via genomic changes, adaptive resistance in cancer involves rapid cellular reprogramming at a nongenomic level. In triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) a robust transcriptional adaptation to MEK inhibition (MEKi) by the MEK inhibitor, trametinib, is observed in both TNBC patients and preclinical models. This transcriptional adaptation includes upregulation of bypass signaling molecules, including receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs), to reactivate cellular proliferation programs in the presence of the initial drug challenge. Rather than attempting to antagonize RTK upregulation using a secondary kinase inhibitor in conjunction with the initial, primary targeted therapeutic, we have employed a strategy to broadly inhibit MEKi-induced transcriptional adaptation through the use of BET bromodomain inhibitors. BET protein family bromodomains bind to acetylated lysine moieties of histone subunits or transcription factors to regulate transcriptional elongation via recruitment of P-TEFb, a RNA polymerase II regulatory complex containing CDK9 and Cyclin T1. In TNBC we found the combination of MEKi + BET bromodomain inhibition (BETi) resulted in durable tumor cell growth inhibition not obtained with trametinib alone, nor with different kinase inhibitor combinations. Importantly, we observed in vivo MEKi + BETi synergy in orthotopic SUM159PT xenograft and T11 and 2225 mouse orthotopic syngeneic transplant models of TNBC. This synergism is not limited to TNBC, as we have shown that MEKi + BETi results in durable growth suppression in HER2+ breast cancer. A central question is the mechanism of BETi efficacy in the context of suppressing adaptation to targeted therapeutics. We asked if BRD4 function at enhancers is critical for adaptive transcription in response to MEK1/2 inhibition by trametinib. We found vast chromatin remodeling in the form of de novo enhancer formation and remodeling in response to trametinib in TNBC cells. Enhancers with pronounced BRD4 density and co-occupied with prototypical enhancer marks (H3K27ac, MED1, H3K4me1) were rapidly (1-4 h) formed genome-wide, including at sites proximal to receptor tyrosine kinase loci including DDR1, KDR, FGFR2, and PDGFRB, each influential in TNBC adaptive resistance. Trametinib-responsive enhancers were remodeled across the genome, but with BETi the total number of enhancers remained near baseline. In fact, BETi was able to disrupt enhancers seeded in response to trametinib. We observed correlation of transcriptional induction of genes proximal to the enhancer density induced by trametinib and a corresponding correlative decrease in transcript levels of the cognate genes of the seeded enhancers with combination MEKi+BETi treatment. Does the enhancer paradigm provide a potential source of pharmacologic targets for attenuating adaptive transcription beyond that of BRD4? In addition to BETi, we found that pharmacologic perturbation of CBP/p300 acetyltransferase, capable of depositing acetylation at H3K27 of enhancers, or core P-TEFb constituent CDK9 abrogated adaptive RTK upregulation elicited by MEKi. BRD4 directly associates with the transcriptional regulator JMJD6, a JmjC family demethylase, and, accordingly, the use of a pan-JmjC family demethylase inhibitor or siRNA targeting JMJD6 diminished RTK adaption. Similar response abrogation was achieved with depletion of the histone H3 lysine 36 methyltransferase NSD3 or by depleting CDK7, whose transcriptional regulatory activity is conferred by phosphorylation of its substrates including CDK9 and the carboxy-terminal domain (CTD) of RNA polymerase II. While small-molecule inhibitors are currently not yet available or are pre-phase I for many of these purported strategies to block adaptive resistance, our preclinical data suggest that protein complexes of drug-induced enhancers may be a largely untapped frontier of epigenetic targets to block adaptive bypass resistance to targeted therapies. Citation Format: Jon Zawistowski, Samantha Bevill, Gary L. Johnson. Enhancer remodeling in response to MEK inhibition in TNBC [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the AACR Special Conference: Advances in Breast Cancer Research; 2017 Oct 7-10; Hollywood, CA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Mol Cancer Res 2018;16(8_Suppl):Abstract nr IA23.
摘要:TNBC中MEK抑制对增强子重塑的响应
与通过基因组变化对靶向治疗产生的获得性耐药相比,癌症的适应性耐药涉及非基因组水平的快速细胞重编程。在三阴性乳腺癌(TNBC)中,在TNBC患者和临床前模型中观察到MEK抑制剂曲美替尼对MEK抑制(MEKi)的强大转录适应。这种转录适应包括旁路信号分子的上调,包括受体酪氨酸激酶(RTKs),以在初始药物挑战下重新激活细胞增殖程序。我们没有尝试使用二级激酶抑制剂与初始的、主要的靶向治疗相结合来拮抗RTK上调,而是采用了一种策略,通过使用BET溴域抑制剂来广泛抑制meki诱导的转录适应。BET蛋白家族溴结构域与组蛋白亚基的乙酰化赖氨酸部分或转录因子结合,通过募集P-TEFb(一种含有CDK9和Cyclin T1的RNA聚合酶II调节复合物)来调节转录伸长。在TNBC中,我们发现MEKi + BETi溴结构域抑制(BETi)联合使用可产生持久的肿瘤细胞生长抑制,这是单独使用曲美替尼或不同激酶抑制剂联合使用无法获得的。重要的是,我们在原位SUM159PT异种移植物和T11和2225小鼠TNBC原位同基因移植模型中观察到MEKi + BETi在体内的协同作用。这种协同作用并不局限于TNBC,因为我们已经表明MEKi + BETi在HER2+乳腺癌中导致持久的生长抑制。一个核心问题是BETi在抑制对靶向治疗的适应方面的作用机制。我们询问BRD4在增强子上的功能是否对曲美替尼抑制MEK1/2的适应性转录至关重要。我们在TNBC细胞中发现了大量的染色质重塑,以新生增强子的形成和重塑的形式响应曲美替尼。具有显著BRD4密度并与原型增强子标记(H3K27ac, MED1, H3K4me1)共占据的增强子在全基因组范围内(1-4小时)迅速形成,包括靠近受体酪氨酸激酶位点的位点,包括DDR1, KDR, FGFR2和PDGFRB,每个位点都对TNBC适应性抗性有影响。在整个基因组中重构了曲美替尼应答增强子,但对于BETi,增强子的总数保持在基线附近。事实上,BETi能够破坏对曲美替尼反应的增强剂。我们观察到曲美替尼诱导增强子密度近端基因的转录诱导与MEKi+BETi联合处理种子增强子同源基因转录水平的相应降低相关。增强子模式是否为BRD4以外的适应性转录减弱提供了潜在的药理学靶标来源?除了BETi,我们还发现CBP/p300乙酰转移酶(能够在增强子的H3K27位点沉积乙酰化)或核心P-TEFb成分CDK9的药理学扰动可以消除MEKi引起的适应性RTK上调。BRD4直接与转录调节因子JMJD6(一种JmjC家族去甲基化酶)相关,因此,使用泛JmjC家族去甲基化酶抑制剂或靶向JMJD6的siRNA会降低RTK的适应性。通过减少组蛋白H3赖氨酸36甲基转移酶NSD3或减少CDK7(其转录调节活性是通过其底物的磷酸化,包括CDK9和RNA聚合酶II的羧基末端结构域(CTD))来实现的),也可以实现类似的反应消除。虽然目前还没有小分子抑制剂可用,或者许多这些所谓的阻断适应性耐药策略处于I期前期,但我们的临床前数据表明,药物诱导增强剂的蛋白质复合物可能是阻断靶向治疗的适应性旁路耐药的表观遗传靶点的很大程度上尚未开发的前沿。引用格式:Jon Zawistowski, Samantha Bevill, Gary L. Johnson。TNBC中MEK抑制的增强子重塑[摘要]。摘自:AACR特别会议论文集:乳腺癌研究进展;2017年10月7-10日;费城(PA): AACR;中华肿瘤杂志,2018;16(8):1 - 2。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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