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Loss of p53 function at late stages of tumorigenesis confers ARF-dependent vulnerability to p53 reactivation therapy

Cancer development is driven by activated oncogenes and loss of tumor suppressors. While oncogene inhibitors have entered routine clinical practice, tumor suppressor reactivation therapy remains to be established. For the most frequently inactivated tumor suppressor p53, genetic mouse models have de...

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Autores principales: Klimovich, Boris, Mutlu, Samet, Schneikert, Jean, Elmshäuser, Sabrina, Klimovich, Maria, Nist, Andrea, Mernberger, Marco, Timofeev, Oleg, Stiewe, Thorsten
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: National Academy of Sciences 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6825290/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31611375
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1910255116
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author Klimovich, Boris
Mutlu, Samet
Schneikert, Jean
Elmshäuser, Sabrina
Klimovich, Maria
Nist, Andrea
Mernberger, Marco
Timofeev, Oleg
Stiewe, Thorsten
author_facet Klimovich, Boris
Mutlu, Samet
Schneikert, Jean
Elmshäuser, Sabrina
Klimovich, Maria
Nist, Andrea
Mernberger, Marco
Timofeev, Oleg
Stiewe, Thorsten
author_sort Klimovich, Boris
collection PubMed
description Cancer development is driven by activated oncogenes and loss of tumor suppressors. While oncogene inhibitors have entered routine clinical practice, tumor suppressor reactivation therapy remains to be established. For the most frequently inactivated tumor suppressor p53, genetic mouse models have demonstrated regression of p53-null tumors upon p53 reactivation. While this was shown in tumor models driven by p53 loss as the initiating lesion, many human tumors initially develop in the presence of wild-type p53, acquire aberrations in the p53 pathway to bypass p53-mediated tumor suppression, and inactivate p53 itself only at later stages during metastatic progression or therapy. To explore the efficacy of p53 reactivation in this scenario, we used a reversibly switchable p53 (p53ER(TAM)) mouse allele to generate Eµ-Myc–driven lymphomas in the presence of active p53 and, after full lymphoma establishment, switched off p53 to model late-stage p53 inactivation. Although these lymphomas had evolved in the presence of active p53, later loss and subsequent p53 reactivation surprisingly activated p53 target genes triggering massive apoptosis, tumor regression, and long-term cure of the majority of animals. Mechanistically, the reactivation response was dependent on Cdkn2a/p19Arf, which is commonly silenced in p53 wild-type lymphomas, but became reexpressed upon late-stage p53 inactivation. Likewise, human p53 wild-type tumor cells with CRISPR-engineered switchable p53ER(TAM) alleles responded to p53 reactivation when CDKN2A/p14ARF function was restored or mimicked with Mdm2 inhibitors. Together, these experiments provide genetic proof of concept that tumors can respond, in an ARF-dependent manner, to p53 reactivation even if p53 inactivation has occurred late during tumor evolution.
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spelling pubmed-68252902019-11-06 Loss of p53 function at late stages of tumorigenesis confers ARF-dependent vulnerability to p53 reactivation therapy Klimovich, Boris Mutlu, Samet Schneikert, Jean Elmshäuser, Sabrina Klimovich, Maria Nist, Andrea Mernberger, Marco Timofeev, Oleg Stiewe, Thorsten Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Biological Sciences Cancer development is driven by activated oncogenes and loss of tumor suppressors. While oncogene inhibitors have entered routine clinical practice, tumor suppressor reactivation therapy remains to be established. For the most frequently inactivated tumor suppressor p53, genetic mouse models have demonstrated regression of p53-null tumors upon p53 reactivation. While this was shown in tumor models driven by p53 loss as the initiating lesion, many human tumors initially develop in the presence of wild-type p53, acquire aberrations in the p53 pathway to bypass p53-mediated tumor suppression, and inactivate p53 itself only at later stages during metastatic progression or therapy. To explore the efficacy of p53 reactivation in this scenario, we used a reversibly switchable p53 (p53ER(TAM)) mouse allele to generate Eµ-Myc–driven lymphomas in the presence of active p53 and, after full lymphoma establishment, switched off p53 to model late-stage p53 inactivation. Although these lymphomas had evolved in the presence of active p53, later loss and subsequent p53 reactivation surprisingly activated p53 target genes triggering massive apoptosis, tumor regression, and long-term cure of the majority of animals. Mechanistically, the reactivation response was dependent on Cdkn2a/p19Arf, which is commonly silenced in p53 wild-type lymphomas, but became reexpressed upon late-stage p53 inactivation. Likewise, human p53 wild-type tumor cells with CRISPR-engineered switchable p53ER(TAM) alleles responded to p53 reactivation when CDKN2A/p14ARF function was restored or mimicked with Mdm2 inhibitors. Together, these experiments provide genetic proof of concept that tumors can respond, in an ARF-dependent manner, to p53 reactivation even if p53 inactivation has occurred late during tumor evolution. National Academy of Sciences 2019-10-29 2019-10-14 /pmc/articles/PMC6825290/ /pubmed/31611375 http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1910255116 Text en Copyright © 2019 the Author(s). Published by PNAS. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This open access article is distributed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License 4.0 (CC BY-NC-ND) (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Biological Sciences
Klimovich, Boris
Mutlu, Samet
Schneikert, Jean
Elmshäuser, Sabrina
Klimovich, Maria
Nist, Andrea
Mernberger, Marco
Timofeev, Oleg
Stiewe, Thorsten
Loss of p53 function at late stages of tumorigenesis confers ARF-dependent vulnerability to p53 reactivation therapy
title Loss of p53 function at late stages of tumorigenesis confers ARF-dependent vulnerability to p53 reactivation therapy
title_full Loss of p53 function at late stages of tumorigenesis confers ARF-dependent vulnerability to p53 reactivation therapy
title_fullStr Loss of p53 function at late stages of tumorigenesis confers ARF-dependent vulnerability to p53 reactivation therapy
title_full_unstemmed Loss of p53 function at late stages of tumorigenesis confers ARF-dependent vulnerability to p53 reactivation therapy
title_short Loss of p53 function at late stages of tumorigenesis confers ARF-dependent vulnerability to p53 reactivation therapy
title_sort loss of p53 function at late stages of tumorigenesis confers arf-dependent vulnerability to p53 reactivation therapy
topic Biological Sciences
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6825290/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31611375
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1910255116
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