BRD4-mediated repression of p53 is a target for combination therapy in AML

Anne-Louise Latif, Ashley Newcombe,Sha Li, Kathryn Gilroy,Neil A. Robertson, Xue Lei,Helen J. S. Stewart, John Cole, Maria Terradas Terradas,Loveena Rishi, Lynn McGarry,Claire McKeeve, Claire Reid,William Clark, Joana Campos,Kristina Kirschner, Andrew Davis,Jonathan Lopez, Jun-ichi Sakamaki,Jennifer P. Morton, Kevin M. Ryan,Stephen W. G. Tait, Sheela A. Abraham,Tessa Holyoake, Brian Higgins,Xu Huang, Karen Blyth,Mhairi Copland, Timothy J. T. Chevassut,Karen Keeshan,Peter D. Adams

Nature Communications(2021)

引用 32|浏览7
暂无评分
摘要
Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a typically lethal molecularly heterogeneous disease, with few broad-spectrum therapeutic targets. Unusually, most AML retain wild-type TP53 , encoding the pro-apoptotic tumor suppressor p53. MDM2 inhibitors (MDM2i), which activate wild-type p53, and BET inhibitors (BETi), targeting the BET-family co-activator BRD4, both show encouraging pre-clinical activity, but limited clinical activity as single agents. Here, we report enhanced toxicity of combined MDM2i and BETi towards AML cell lines, primary human blasts and mouse models, resulting from BETi’s ability to evict an unexpected repressive form of BRD4 from p53 target genes, and hence potentiate MDM2i-induced p53 activation. These results indicate that wild-type TP53 and a transcriptional repressor function of BRD4 together represent a potential broad-spectrum synthetic therapeutic vulnerability for AML.
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要