Oxidative phosphorylation is a metabolic vulnerability in chemotherapy-resistant triple-negative breast cancer

KW Evans, E Yuca, SS Scott, M Zhao, N Paez Arango… - Cancer research, 2021 - AACR
KW Evans, E Yuca, SS Scott, M Zhao, N Paez Arango, CX Cruz Pico, T Saridogan…
Cancer research, 2021AACR
Oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) is an active metabolic pathway in many cancers. RNA
from pretreatment biopsies from patients with triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) who
received neoadjuvant chemotherapy demonstrated that the top canonical pathway
associated with worse outcome was higher expression of OXPHOS signature. IACS-10759,
a novel inhibitor of OXPHOS, stabilized growth in multiple TNBC patient-derived xenografts
(PDX). On gene expression profiling, all of the sensitive models displayed a basal-like 1 …
Abstract
Oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) is an active metabolic pathway in many cancers. RNA from pretreatment biopsies from patients with triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) who received neoadjuvant chemotherapy demonstrated that the top canonical pathway associated with worse outcome was higher expression of OXPHOS signature. IACS-10759, a novel inhibitor of OXPHOS, stabilized growth in multiple TNBC patient-derived xenografts (PDX). On gene expression profiling, all of the sensitive models displayed a basal-like 1 TNBC subtype. Expression of mitochondrial genes was significantly higher in sensitive PDXs. An in vivo functional genomics screen to identify synthetic lethal targets in tumors treated with IACS-10759 found several potential targets, including CDK4. We validated the antitumor efficacy of the combination of palbociclib, a CDK4/6 inhibitor, and IACS-10759 in vitro and in vivo. In addition, the combination of IACS-10759 and multikinase inhibitor cabozantinib had improved antitumor efficacy. Taken together, our data suggest that OXPHOS is a metabolic vulnerability in TNBC that may be leveraged with novel therapeutics in combination regimens.
Significance
These findings suggest that triple-negative breast cancer is highly reliant on OXPHOS and that inhibiting OXPHOS may be a novel approach to enhance efficacy of several targeted therapies.
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