CDK4/6抑制剂:从静止到衰老

A. Yoshida, J. Diehl
{"title":"CDK4/6抑制剂:从静止到衰老","authors":"A. Yoshida, J. Diehl","doi":"10.18632/ONCOSCIENCE.256","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The CDK4 and CDK6 kinases (CDK4/6) are the first cyclin dependent kinases to be activated and initiate transition through G1 phase of the cell cycle. In response to mitogenic growth factors, the CDK4/6 kinase together with one of three D-type cyclins (D1, D2, D3) initiates G1 progression by virtue of its capacity to phosphorylate the retinoblastoma protein (RB), a bona fide tumor suppressor and Gate Keeper of cell division. Phosphorylation of RB in turn results in de-repression of E2F transcription factors thereby triggering expression of genes whose products drive S-phase entry and progression (1). Cyclin D1 dysregulation occurs in a majority of human cancers, a direct result of gene amplification or mutations that disrupt its protein degradation. CDK4 amplification or activating point mutations are also observed in select malignancies. The end result of such aberrations is elevated CDK4 catalytic function, increased cell division and decreased dependence on extracellular mitogenic growth factors for cell proliferation. These observations have contributed to significant efforts to develop selective small molecule CDK4/6 inhibitors with the hope that such entities would have significant anti-cancer benefit. PD0332991 (Palbociclib), a highly selective inhibitor of CDK4 (IC50: 0.011 μM) and CDK6 (IC50: 0.016 μM), has been shown to be highly efficacious in a variety of cell culture models with regard to its capacity to suppress cell cycle progression through inhibition of CDK4/6 kinase activity in an RB-dependent manner and it is currently being tested in clinical trials for malignancies such as mantle cell lymphoma, breast cancer, and colorectal cancer (2). \n \nWhile acute inhibition of CDK4/6 is associated with reversible cell cycle withdraw or quiescence, some recent investigations have provided provocative evidence that Palbociclib treatment can in fact trigger irreversible withdraw, a state referred to as senescence (3, 4, 5). However the mechanisms that determine whether Palbociclib evokes quiescence versus senescence are yet to be established. In work described by Kovatcheva et al a new molecular mechanism wherein MDM2 and ATRX determine cell fate following CDK4/6 inhibition in cancer cells derived from several distinct cancer etiologies such as well-differentiated and dedifferentiated liposarcoma (WD/DDLS), lung cancer, and glioma (6). In this work, WD/DDLS cell lines were classified based upon cell fate following Palbociclib exposure: quiescence (non-responders) versus senescence (responders). While both groups had the expected reduction in RB phosphorylation, the responders also exhibited a significant decrease in MDM2 levels after prolonged CDK4 inhibition. Importantly, the phenotype is RB dependent, but is p53 and p16INK4a-independent. The capacity of MDM2 knock down to trigger senescence from quiescent phase in a combination with Palbociclib in non-responders, provides evidence that the reduction of MDM2 is in fact causative in the response and no simply an indirect consequence. \n \nWhile the authors were unable to ascribe novel mechanistic insights with regard to MDM2 targets in the senescence response, additional experiments revealed that auto-ubiquitylation of MDM2 is essential for down regulation following Palbociclib exposure. Since MDM2 auto-ubiquitylation is regulated by HAUSP/USP7, a de-ubiquitylating enzyme, one might expect that its alteration of HAUSP/USP7 function might also impact senescence. Consistently, cell senescence could be induced by HAUSP/USP7 knockdown. However alteration of HAUSP/USP7 levels and association with MDM2 did not correlate with responder versus non-responder status demonstrating that HAUSP/USP7 does not contribute directly to determine cell fate following Palbociclib exposure. \n \nNovel molecular insights into the cell fate switch arose from interrogation of a molecule that has been implicated in tumor cell escape from senescence; ATRX, ALT (Alternative lengthening of telomeres) associated protein. Critical analysis of ATRX in responders versus non-responders revealed differential post-translational modification of the c-terminus ATRX. The nature of this modification is currently unknown, nevertheless phosphorylation is a likely candidate modification. Knockdown of ATRX in responders rescued MDM2 loss and rendered these cells refractory to senescence but not quiescence revealing a functional link among ATRX, MDM2 and cell fate. \n \nWhile the mechanistic insights provided in this work will provide a critical foundation for further investigations of the molecular mechanisms that underlie a cells decision to undergo the conversion of quiescence to senescence (geroconversion), their impact would be limited if these same observations were not of value in clinical responses. Importantly, Kovatcheva et al also evaluated their model in biopsies available in a clinical trial utilizing Palbociclib in WD/DDLS patients revealing that MDM2 loss following Palbociclib exposure correlated with response. \n \nPalbociclib has been approved breakthrough therapy designation from FDA, however the molecular mechanisms underlying CDK4 inhibitor suppress tumor growth remain poorly define. Kovatcheva et al provide novel insights into the mechanisms that govern geroconversion. MDM2 and ATRX clearly contribute to cell fate following CDK4 inhibition in WD/DDLS and potentially other epithelial cancers (Figure ​(Figure1).1). Ultimately, the insights provided in this work have distinct diagnostic implications and suggest the possibility that targeting MDM2 or ATRX by small molecule in a combination with CDK4 inhibitor might be promising for cancer therapy. \n \n \n \nFigure 1 \n \nMDM2 and ATRX regulate geroconversion in response to Palbociclib","PeriodicalId":94164,"journal":{"name":"Oncoscience","volume":"11 1","pages":"896 - 897"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2015-10-20","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"13","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"CDK4/6 inhibitor: from quiescence to senescence\",\"authors\":\"A. Yoshida, J. Diehl\",\"doi\":\"10.18632/ONCOSCIENCE.256\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"The CDK4 and CDK6 kinases (CDK4/6) are the first cyclin dependent kinases to be activated and initiate transition through G1 phase of the cell cycle. In response to mitogenic growth factors, the CDK4/6 kinase together with one of three D-type cyclins (D1, D2, D3) initiates G1 progression by virtue of its capacity to phosphorylate the retinoblastoma protein (RB), a bona fide tumor suppressor and Gate Keeper of cell division. Phosphorylation of RB in turn results in de-repression of E2F transcription factors thereby triggering expression of genes whose products drive S-phase entry and progression (1). Cyclin D1 dysregulation occurs in a majority of human cancers, a direct result of gene amplification or mutations that disrupt its protein degradation. CDK4 amplification or activating point mutations are also observed in select malignancies. The end result of such aberrations is elevated CDK4 catalytic function, increased cell division and decreased dependence on extracellular mitogenic growth factors for cell proliferation. These observations have contributed to significant efforts to develop selective small molecule CDK4/6 inhibitors with the hope that such entities would have significant anti-cancer benefit. PD0332991 (Palbociclib), a highly selective inhibitor of CDK4 (IC50: 0.011 μM) and CDK6 (IC50: 0.016 μM), has been shown to be highly efficacious in a variety of cell culture models with regard to its capacity to suppress cell cycle progression through inhibition of CDK4/6 kinase activity in an RB-dependent manner and it is currently being tested in clinical trials for malignancies such as mantle cell lymphoma, breast cancer, and colorectal cancer (2). \\n \\nWhile acute inhibition of CDK4/6 is associated with reversible cell cycle withdraw or quiescence, some recent investigations have provided provocative evidence that Palbociclib treatment can in fact trigger irreversible withdraw, a state referred to as senescence (3, 4, 5). However the mechanisms that determine whether Palbociclib evokes quiescence versus senescence are yet to be established. In work described by Kovatcheva et al a new molecular mechanism wherein MDM2 and ATRX determine cell fate following CDK4/6 inhibition in cancer cells derived from several distinct cancer etiologies such as well-differentiated and dedifferentiated liposarcoma (WD/DDLS), lung cancer, and glioma (6). In this work, WD/DDLS cell lines were classified based upon cell fate following Palbociclib exposure: quiescence (non-responders) versus senescence (responders). While both groups had the expected reduction in RB phosphorylation, the responders also exhibited a significant decrease in MDM2 levels after prolonged CDK4 inhibition. Importantly, the phenotype is RB dependent, but is p53 and p16INK4a-independent. The capacity of MDM2 knock down to trigger senescence from quiescent phase in a combination with Palbociclib in non-responders, provides evidence that the reduction of MDM2 is in fact causative in the response and no simply an indirect consequence. \\n \\nWhile the authors were unable to ascribe novel mechanistic insights with regard to MDM2 targets in the senescence response, additional experiments revealed that auto-ubiquitylation of MDM2 is essential for down regulation following Palbociclib exposure. Since MDM2 auto-ubiquitylation is regulated by HAUSP/USP7, a de-ubiquitylating enzyme, one might expect that its alteration of HAUSP/USP7 function might also impact senescence. Consistently, cell senescence could be induced by HAUSP/USP7 knockdown. However alteration of HAUSP/USP7 levels and association with MDM2 did not correlate with responder versus non-responder status demonstrating that HAUSP/USP7 does not contribute directly to determine cell fate following Palbociclib exposure. \\n \\nNovel molecular insights into the cell fate switch arose from interrogation of a molecule that has been implicated in tumor cell escape from senescence; ATRX, ALT (Alternative lengthening of telomeres) associated protein. Critical analysis of ATRX in responders versus non-responders revealed differential post-translational modification of the c-terminus ATRX. The nature of this modification is currently unknown, nevertheless phosphorylation is a likely candidate modification. Knockdown of ATRX in responders rescued MDM2 loss and rendered these cells refractory to senescence but not quiescence revealing a functional link among ATRX, MDM2 and cell fate. \\n \\nWhile the mechanistic insights provided in this work will provide a critical foundation for further investigations of the molecular mechanisms that underlie a cells decision to undergo the conversion of quiescence to senescence (geroconversion), their impact would be limited if these same observations were not of value in clinical responses. Importantly, Kovatcheva et al also evaluated their model in biopsies available in a clinical trial utilizing Palbociclib in WD/DDLS patients revealing that MDM2 loss following Palbociclib exposure correlated with response. \\n \\nPalbociclib has been approved breakthrough therapy designation from FDA, however the molecular mechanisms underlying CDK4 inhibitor suppress tumor growth remain poorly define. Kovatcheva et al provide novel insights into the mechanisms that govern geroconversion. MDM2 and ATRX clearly contribute to cell fate following CDK4 inhibition in WD/DDLS and potentially other epithelial cancers (Figure ​(Figure1).1). 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引用次数: 13

摘要

CDK4和CDK6激酶(CDK4/6)是第一个被激活的周期蛋白依赖性激酶,并在细胞周期的G1期开始转变。在有丝分裂生长因子的作用下,CDK4/6激酶与三种d型细胞周期蛋白(D1, D2, D3)中的一种一起,通过磷酸化视网膜母细胞瘤蛋白(RB)的能力启动G1进程,RB是一种真正的肿瘤抑制因子和细胞分裂的看门人。RB的磷酸化反过来导致E2F转录因子的去抑制,从而触发其产物驱动s期进入和进展的基因的表达(1)。Cyclin D1失调发生在大多数人类癌症中,这是基因扩增或突变破坏其蛋白质降解的直接结果。在某些恶性肿瘤中也观察到CDK4扩增或激活点突变。这种畸变的最终结果是CDK4催化功能升高,细胞分裂增加,细胞增殖对细胞外有丝分裂生长因子的依赖减少。这些观察结果有助于开发选择性小分子CDK4/6抑制剂,希望这些实体具有显着的抗癌益处。PD0332991 (Palbociclib),高选择性CDK4 (IC50: 0.011 μM)和CDK6 (IC50: 0.011 μM)抑制剂0.016 μM),已在多种细胞培养模型中显示出其通过以rb依赖的方式抑制CDK4/6激酶活性来抑制细胞周期进展的能力,目前正在用于套细胞淋巴瘤、乳腺癌和结直肠癌等恶性肿瘤的临床试验中(2)。而CDK4/6的急性抑制与可逆的细胞周期退出或静止有关。最近的一些研究提供了令人兴奋的证据,表明Palbociclib治疗实际上可以引发不可逆的退出,一种被称为衰老的状态(3,4,5)。然而,Palbociclib是否引起静止或衰老的机制尚未确定。在Kovatcheva等人描述的一种新的分子机制中,MDM2和ATRX决定了来自几种不同癌症病因的癌细胞中CDK4/6抑制后的细胞命运,如高分化和去分化脂肪肉瘤(WD/DDLS)、肺癌和胶质瘤(6)。在这项工作中,WD/DDLS细胞系根据帕博西尼暴露后的细胞命运进行分类:静止(无应答)和衰老(应答)。虽然两组患者RB磷酸化水平均有预期的降低,但在长时间抑制CDK4后,应答者也表现出MDM2水平的显著降低。重要的是,表型依赖于RB,但不依赖于p53和p16ink4a。在无应答者中,与Palbociclib联合使用时,MDM2敲低触发静止期衰老的能力提供了证据,证明MDM2的降低实际上是应答的原因,而不仅仅是间接后果。虽然作者无法将MDM2在衰老反应中的靶点的机制归因于新的见解,但额外的实验显示,MDM2的自泛素化对于帕博西尼暴露后的下调至关重要。由于MDM2的自泛素化是由一种去泛素化酶HAUSP/USP7调控的,因此人们可能会认为,它对HAUSP/USP7功能的改变也可能影响衰老。同样,HAUSP/USP7敲低可诱导细胞衰老。然而,HAUSP/USP7水平的改变和与MDM2的关联与应答者和非应答者状态无关,这表明HAUSP/USP7并不直接决定帕博西尼暴露后的细胞命运。对细胞命运开关的新分子见解源于对一种与肿瘤细胞免于衰老有关的分子的询问;ALT(端粒选择性延长)相关蛋白。对应答者和无应答者的ATRX的关键分析显示,c端ATRX的翻译后修饰存在差异。这种修饰的性质目前尚不清楚,然而磷酸化是一种可能的修饰。应答者中ATRX的敲低挽救了MDM2的丢失,并使这些细胞不易衰老,而不是静止,揭示了ATRX、MDM2和细胞命运之间的功能联系。虽然这项工作提供的机制见解将为进一步研究细胞决定从静止到衰老(衰老转化)的分子机制提供关键基础,但如果这些相同的观察结果在临床反应中没有价值,它们的影响将是有限的。 重要的是,Kovatcheva等人还在WD/DDLS患者使用Palbociclib的临床试验中评估了他们的活检模型,显示Palbociclib暴露后MDM2损失与反应相关。帕博西尼已被FDA批准为突破性疗法,然而CDK4抑制剂抑制肿瘤生长的分子机制仍不明确。Kovatcheva等人对控制年龄转换的机制提供了新的见解。MDM2和ATRX明显有助于WD/DDLS和其他潜在上皮癌中CDK4抑制后的细胞命运(图(图1))。最终,这项工作提供的见解具有独特的诊断意义,并表明通过小分子靶向MDM2或ATRX与CDK4抑制剂联合可能有希望用于癌症治疗。图1 MDM2和ATRX调节Palbociclib对老年转化的反应
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
CDK4/6 inhibitor: from quiescence to senescence
The CDK4 and CDK6 kinases (CDK4/6) are the first cyclin dependent kinases to be activated and initiate transition through G1 phase of the cell cycle. In response to mitogenic growth factors, the CDK4/6 kinase together with one of three D-type cyclins (D1, D2, D3) initiates G1 progression by virtue of its capacity to phosphorylate the retinoblastoma protein (RB), a bona fide tumor suppressor and Gate Keeper of cell division. Phosphorylation of RB in turn results in de-repression of E2F transcription factors thereby triggering expression of genes whose products drive S-phase entry and progression (1). Cyclin D1 dysregulation occurs in a majority of human cancers, a direct result of gene amplification or mutations that disrupt its protein degradation. CDK4 amplification or activating point mutations are also observed in select malignancies. The end result of such aberrations is elevated CDK4 catalytic function, increased cell division and decreased dependence on extracellular mitogenic growth factors for cell proliferation. These observations have contributed to significant efforts to develop selective small molecule CDK4/6 inhibitors with the hope that such entities would have significant anti-cancer benefit. PD0332991 (Palbociclib), a highly selective inhibitor of CDK4 (IC50: 0.011 μM) and CDK6 (IC50: 0.016 μM), has been shown to be highly efficacious in a variety of cell culture models with regard to its capacity to suppress cell cycle progression through inhibition of CDK4/6 kinase activity in an RB-dependent manner and it is currently being tested in clinical trials for malignancies such as mantle cell lymphoma, breast cancer, and colorectal cancer (2). While acute inhibition of CDK4/6 is associated with reversible cell cycle withdraw or quiescence, some recent investigations have provided provocative evidence that Palbociclib treatment can in fact trigger irreversible withdraw, a state referred to as senescence (3, 4, 5). However the mechanisms that determine whether Palbociclib evokes quiescence versus senescence are yet to be established. In work described by Kovatcheva et al a new molecular mechanism wherein MDM2 and ATRX determine cell fate following CDK4/6 inhibition in cancer cells derived from several distinct cancer etiologies such as well-differentiated and dedifferentiated liposarcoma (WD/DDLS), lung cancer, and glioma (6). In this work, WD/DDLS cell lines were classified based upon cell fate following Palbociclib exposure: quiescence (non-responders) versus senescence (responders). While both groups had the expected reduction in RB phosphorylation, the responders also exhibited a significant decrease in MDM2 levels after prolonged CDK4 inhibition. Importantly, the phenotype is RB dependent, but is p53 and p16INK4a-independent. The capacity of MDM2 knock down to trigger senescence from quiescent phase in a combination with Palbociclib in non-responders, provides evidence that the reduction of MDM2 is in fact causative in the response and no simply an indirect consequence. While the authors were unable to ascribe novel mechanistic insights with regard to MDM2 targets in the senescence response, additional experiments revealed that auto-ubiquitylation of MDM2 is essential for down regulation following Palbociclib exposure. Since MDM2 auto-ubiquitylation is regulated by HAUSP/USP7, a de-ubiquitylating enzyme, one might expect that its alteration of HAUSP/USP7 function might also impact senescence. Consistently, cell senescence could be induced by HAUSP/USP7 knockdown. However alteration of HAUSP/USP7 levels and association with MDM2 did not correlate with responder versus non-responder status demonstrating that HAUSP/USP7 does not contribute directly to determine cell fate following Palbociclib exposure. Novel molecular insights into the cell fate switch arose from interrogation of a molecule that has been implicated in tumor cell escape from senescence; ATRX, ALT (Alternative lengthening of telomeres) associated protein. Critical analysis of ATRX in responders versus non-responders revealed differential post-translational modification of the c-terminus ATRX. The nature of this modification is currently unknown, nevertheless phosphorylation is a likely candidate modification. Knockdown of ATRX in responders rescued MDM2 loss and rendered these cells refractory to senescence but not quiescence revealing a functional link among ATRX, MDM2 and cell fate. While the mechanistic insights provided in this work will provide a critical foundation for further investigations of the molecular mechanisms that underlie a cells decision to undergo the conversion of quiescence to senescence (geroconversion), their impact would be limited if these same observations were not of value in clinical responses. Importantly, Kovatcheva et al also evaluated their model in biopsies available in a clinical trial utilizing Palbociclib in WD/DDLS patients revealing that MDM2 loss following Palbociclib exposure correlated with response. Palbociclib has been approved breakthrough therapy designation from FDA, however the molecular mechanisms underlying CDK4 inhibitor suppress tumor growth remain poorly define. Kovatcheva et al provide novel insights into the mechanisms that govern geroconversion. MDM2 and ATRX clearly contribute to cell fate following CDK4 inhibition in WD/DDLS and potentially other epithelial cancers (Figure ​(Figure1).1). Ultimately, the insights provided in this work have distinct diagnostic implications and suggest the possibility that targeting MDM2 or ATRX by small molecule in a combination with CDK4 inhibitor might be promising for cancer therapy. Figure 1 MDM2 and ATRX regulate geroconversion in response to Palbociclib
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