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Low-Molecular Weight Cyclin E Confers a Vulnerability to PKMYT1 Inhibition in Triple-Negative Breast Cancer.

Authors :
Li M
Lulla AR
Wang Y
Tsavaschidis S
Wang F
Karakas C
Nguyen TDT
Bui TN
Pina MA
Chen MK
Mastoraki S
Multani AS
Fowlkes NW
Sahin A
Marshall CG
Hunt KK
Keyomarsi K
Source :
Cancer research [Cancer Res] 2024 Nov 15; Vol. 84 (22), pp. 3864-3880.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Cyclin E is a regulatory subunit of CDK2 that mediates S phase entry and progression. The cleavage of full-length cyclin E (FL-cycE) to low-molecular weight isoforms (LMW-E) dramatically alters substrate specificity, promoting G1-S cell cycle transition and accelerating mitotic exit. Approximately 70% of triple-negative breast cancers (TNBC) express LMW-E, which correlates with poor prognosis. PKMYT1 also plays an important role in mitosis by inhibiting CDK1 to block premature mitotic entry, suggesting it could be a therapeutic target in TNBC expressing LMW-E. In this study, analysis of tumor samples of patients with TNBC revealed that coexpression of LMW-E and PKMYT1-catalyzed CDK1 phosphorylation predicted poor response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Compared with FL-cycE, LMW-E specifically upregulates PKMYT1 expression and protein stability, thereby increasing CDK1 phosphorylation. Inhibiting PKMYT1 with the selective inhibitor RP-6306 (lunresertib) elicited LMW-E-dependent antitumor effects, accelerating premature mitotic entry, inhibiting replication fork restart, and enhancing DNA damage, chromosomal breakage, apoptosis, and replication stress. Importantly, TNBC cell line xenografts expressing LMW-E showed greater sensitivity to RP-6306 than tumors with empty vector or FL-cycE. Furthermore, RP-6306 exerted tumor suppressive effects in LMW-E transgenic murine mammary tumors and patient-derived xenografts of LMW-E-high TNBC but not in the LMW-E null models examined in parallel. Lastly, transcriptomic and immune profiling demonstrated that RP-6306 treatment induced interferon responses and T-cell infiltration in the LMW-E-high tumor microenvironment, enhancing the antitumor immune response. These findings highlight the LMW-E/PKMYT1/CDK1 regulatory axis as a promising therapeutic target in TNBC, providing the rationale for further clinical development of PKMYT1 inhibitors in this aggressive breast cancer subtype. Significance: PKMYT1 upregulation and CDK1 phosphorylation in triple-negative breast cancer expressing low-molecular weight cyclin E leads to suboptimal responses to chemotherapy but sensitizes tumors to PKMYT1 inhibitors, proposing a personalized treatment strategy.<br /> (©2024 American Association for Cancer Research.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1538-7445
Volume :
84
Issue :
22
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Cancer research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
39186665
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-23-4130