Oncogenic signals prime cancer cells for toxic cell overgrowth during a G1 cell cycle arrest
- PMID: 37977117
- DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2023.10.020
Oncogenic signals prime cancer cells for toxic cell overgrowth during a G1 cell cycle arrest
Abstract
CDK4/6 inhibitors are remarkable anti-cancer drugs that can arrest tumor cells in G1 and induce their senescence while causing only relatively mild toxicities in healthy tissues. How they achieve this mechanistically is unclear. We show here that tumor cells are specifically vulnerable to CDK4/6 inhibition because during the G1 arrest, oncogenic signals drive toxic cell overgrowth. This overgrowth causes permanent cell cycle withdrawal by either preventing progression from G1 or inducing genotoxic damage during the subsequent S-phase and mitosis. Inhibiting or reverting oncogenic signals that converge onto mTOR can rescue this excessive growth, DNA damage, and cell cycle exit in cancer cells. Conversely, inducing oncogenic signals in non-transformed cells can drive these toxic phenotypes and sensitize the cells to CDK4/6 inhibition. Together, this demonstrates that cell cycle arrest and oncogenic cell growth is a synthetic lethal combination that is exploited by CDK4/6 inhibitors to induce tumor-specific toxicity.
Keywords: CDK4/6; breast cancer; cell cycle; cell growth; chemotherapy; growth factors; oncogenes; p21; p53; replication stress.
Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of interests B.H.P. is a paid consultant for Jackson Labs, Jansen, Hologics, EQRx, Guardant Health, and Caris; a paid scientific advisory board member for Celcuity Inc.; and an unpaid consultant for Tempus Inc. Under separate licensing agreements between Horizon Discovery and the Johns Hopkins University, B.H.P. is entitled to a share of royalties received by the university on sales of products. The terms of this arrangement are being managed by the Johns Hopkins University in accordance with its conflict-of-interest policies.
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