Cargando…

Targeting E2F Sensitizes Prostate Cancer Cells to Drug-Induced Replication Stress by Promoting Unscheduled CDK1 Activity

SIMPLE SUMMARY: E2F1 and E2F2 are highly expressed in many cancer types, but their contribution to malignancy is not well understood. Here we aimed to define the impact of E2F1/E2F2 deregulation in prostate cancer. We show that inhibition of E2F sensitizes prostate cancer cells to drug-induced repli...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Hamidi, Mohaddase, Eriz, Ainhoa, Mitxelena, Jone, Fernandez-Ares, Larraitz, Aurrekoetxea, Igor, Aspichueta, Patricia, Iglesias-Ara, Ainhoa, Zubiaga, Ana M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9564059/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36230876
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers14194952
_version_ 1784808548015800320
author Hamidi, Mohaddase
Eriz, Ainhoa
Mitxelena, Jone
Fernandez-Ares, Larraitz
Aurrekoetxea, Igor
Aspichueta, Patricia
Iglesias-Ara, Ainhoa
Zubiaga, Ana M.
author_facet Hamidi, Mohaddase
Eriz, Ainhoa
Mitxelena, Jone
Fernandez-Ares, Larraitz
Aurrekoetxea, Igor
Aspichueta, Patricia
Iglesias-Ara, Ainhoa
Zubiaga, Ana M.
author_sort Hamidi, Mohaddase
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: E2F1 and E2F2 are highly expressed in many cancer types, but their contribution to malignancy is not well understood. Here we aimed to define the impact of E2F1/E2F2 deregulation in prostate cancer. We show that inhibition of E2F sensitizes prostate cancer cells to drug-induced replication stress and cell death. We found that E2F target genes involved in nucleotide biosynthesis contribute to maintaining genome stability in prostate cancer cells, but their enzymatic activity is insufficient to prevent replication stress after E2F1/E2F2 depletion. Instead, E2F1/E2F2 hinder premature CDK1 activation during S phase, which is key to ensure genome stability and viability of prostate cancer cells. From a therapeutic perspective, inhibiting E2F activity provokes catastrophic levels of replication stress and blunts xenograft growth in combination with drugs targeting nucleotide biosynthesis or DNA repair. Our results highlight the suitability of targeting E2F for the treatment of prostate cancer. ABSTRACT: E2F1/E2F2 expression correlates with malignancy in prostate cancer (PCa), but its functional significance remains unresolved. To define the mechanisms governed by E2F in PCa, we analyzed the contribution of E2F target genes to the control of genome integrity, and the impact of modulating E2F activity on PCa progression. We show that silencing or inhibiting E2F1/E2F2 induces DNA damage during S phase and potentiates 5-FU-induced replication stress and cellular toxicity. Inhibition of E2F downregulates the expression of E2F targets involved in nucleotide biosynthesis (TK1, DCK, TYMS), whose expression is upregulated by 5-FU. However, their enzymatic products failed to rescue DNA damage of E2F1/E2F2 knockdown cells, suggesting additional mechanisms for E2F function. Interestingly, targeting E2F1/E2F2 in PCa cells reduced WEE1 expression and resulted in premature CDK1 activation during S phase. Inhibition of CDK1/CDK2 prevented DNA damage induced by E2F loss, suggesting that E2F1/E2F2 safeguard genome integrity by restraining CDK1/CDK2 activity. Importantly, combined inhibition of E2F and ATR boosted replication stress and dramatically reduced tumorigenic capacity of PCa cells in xenografts. Collectively, inhibition of E2F in combination with drugs targeting nucleotide biosynthesis or DNA repair is a promising strategy to provoke catastrophic levels of replication stress that could be applied to PCa treatment.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9564059
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-95640592022-10-15 Targeting E2F Sensitizes Prostate Cancer Cells to Drug-Induced Replication Stress by Promoting Unscheduled CDK1 Activity Hamidi, Mohaddase Eriz, Ainhoa Mitxelena, Jone Fernandez-Ares, Larraitz Aurrekoetxea, Igor Aspichueta, Patricia Iglesias-Ara, Ainhoa Zubiaga, Ana M. Cancers (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: E2F1 and E2F2 are highly expressed in many cancer types, but their contribution to malignancy is not well understood. Here we aimed to define the impact of E2F1/E2F2 deregulation in prostate cancer. We show that inhibition of E2F sensitizes prostate cancer cells to drug-induced replication stress and cell death. We found that E2F target genes involved in nucleotide biosynthesis contribute to maintaining genome stability in prostate cancer cells, but their enzymatic activity is insufficient to prevent replication stress after E2F1/E2F2 depletion. Instead, E2F1/E2F2 hinder premature CDK1 activation during S phase, which is key to ensure genome stability and viability of prostate cancer cells. From a therapeutic perspective, inhibiting E2F activity provokes catastrophic levels of replication stress and blunts xenograft growth in combination with drugs targeting nucleotide biosynthesis or DNA repair. Our results highlight the suitability of targeting E2F for the treatment of prostate cancer. ABSTRACT: E2F1/E2F2 expression correlates with malignancy in prostate cancer (PCa), but its functional significance remains unresolved. To define the mechanisms governed by E2F in PCa, we analyzed the contribution of E2F target genes to the control of genome integrity, and the impact of modulating E2F activity on PCa progression. We show that silencing or inhibiting E2F1/E2F2 induces DNA damage during S phase and potentiates 5-FU-induced replication stress and cellular toxicity. Inhibition of E2F downregulates the expression of E2F targets involved in nucleotide biosynthesis (TK1, DCK, TYMS), whose expression is upregulated by 5-FU. However, their enzymatic products failed to rescue DNA damage of E2F1/E2F2 knockdown cells, suggesting additional mechanisms for E2F function. Interestingly, targeting E2F1/E2F2 in PCa cells reduced WEE1 expression and resulted in premature CDK1 activation during S phase. Inhibition of CDK1/CDK2 prevented DNA damage induced by E2F loss, suggesting that E2F1/E2F2 safeguard genome integrity by restraining CDK1/CDK2 activity. Importantly, combined inhibition of E2F and ATR boosted replication stress and dramatically reduced tumorigenic capacity of PCa cells in xenografts. Collectively, inhibition of E2F in combination with drugs targeting nucleotide biosynthesis or DNA repair is a promising strategy to provoke catastrophic levels of replication stress that could be applied to PCa treatment. MDPI 2022-10-10 /pmc/articles/PMC9564059/ /pubmed/36230876 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers14194952 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Hamidi, Mohaddase
Eriz, Ainhoa
Mitxelena, Jone
Fernandez-Ares, Larraitz
Aurrekoetxea, Igor
Aspichueta, Patricia
Iglesias-Ara, Ainhoa
Zubiaga, Ana M.
Targeting E2F Sensitizes Prostate Cancer Cells to Drug-Induced Replication Stress by Promoting Unscheduled CDK1 Activity
title Targeting E2F Sensitizes Prostate Cancer Cells to Drug-Induced Replication Stress by Promoting Unscheduled CDK1 Activity
title_full Targeting E2F Sensitizes Prostate Cancer Cells to Drug-Induced Replication Stress by Promoting Unscheduled CDK1 Activity
title_fullStr Targeting E2F Sensitizes Prostate Cancer Cells to Drug-Induced Replication Stress by Promoting Unscheduled CDK1 Activity
title_full_unstemmed Targeting E2F Sensitizes Prostate Cancer Cells to Drug-Induced Replication Stress by Promoting Unscheduled CDK1 Activity
title_short Targeting E2F Sensitizes Prostate Cancer Cells to Drug-Induced Replication Stress by Promoting Unscheduled CDK1 Activity
title_sort targeting e2f sensitizes prostate cancer cells to drug-induced replication stress by promoting unscheduled cdk1 activity
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9564059/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36230876
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers14194952
work_keys_str_mv AT hamidimohaddase targetinge2fsensitizesprostatecancercellstodruginducedreplicationstressbypromotingunscheduledcdk1activity
AT erizainhoa targetinge2fsensitizesprostatecancercellstodruginducedreplicationstressbypromotingunscheduledcdk1activity
AT mitxelenajone targetinge2fsensitizesprostatecancercellstodruginducedreplicationstressbypromotingunscheduledcdk1activity
AT fernandezareslarraitz targetinge2fsensitizesprostatecancercellstodruginducedreplicationstressbypromotingunscheduledcdk1activity
AT aurrekoetxeaigor targetinge2fsensitizesprostatecancercellstodruginducedreplicationstressbypromotingunscheduledcdk1activity
AT aspichuetapatricia targetinge2fsensitizesprostatecancercellstodruginducedreplicationstressbypromotingunscheduledcdk1activity
AT iglesiasaraainhoa targetinge2fsensitizesprostatecancercellstodruginducedreplicationstressbypromotingunscheduledcdk1activity
AT zubiagaanam targetinge2fsensitizesprostatecancercellstodruginducedreplicationstressbypromotingunscheduledcdk1activity