[PDF][PDF] An embryonic diapause-like adaptation with suppressed Myc activity enables tumor treatment persistence

E Dhimolea, R de Matos Simoes, D Kansara… - Cancer cell, 2021 - cell.com
E Dhimolea, R de Matos Simoes, D Kansara, A Al'Khafaji, J Bouyssou, X Weng, S Sharma…
Cancer cell, 2021cell.com
Treatment-persistent residual tumors impede curative cancer therapy. To understand this
cancer cell state we generated models of treatment persistence that simulate the residual
tumors. We observe that treatment-persistent tumor cells in organoids, xenografts, and
cancer patients adopt a distinct and reversible transcriptional program resembling that of
embryonic diapause, a dormant stage of suspended development triggered by stress and
associated with suppressed Myc activity and overall biosynthesis. In cancer cells, depleting …
Summary
Treatment-persistent residual tumors impede curative cancer therapy. To understand this cancer cell state we generated models of treatment persistence that simulate the residual tumors. We observe that treatment-persistent tumor cells in organoids, xenografts, and cancer patients adopt a distinct and reversible transcriptional program resembling that of embryonic diapause, a dormant stage of suspended development triggered by stress and associated with suppressed Myc activity and overall biosynthesis. In cancer cells, depleting Myc or inhibiting Brd4, a Myc transcriptional co-activator, attenuates drug cytotoxicity through a dormant diapause-like adaptation with reduced apoptotic priming. Conversely, inducible Myc upregulation enhances acute chemotherapeutic activity. Maintaining residual cells in dormancy after chemotherapy by inhibiting Myc activity or interfering with the diapause-like adaptation by inhibiting cyclin-dependent kinase 9 represent potential therapeutic strategies against chemotherapy-persistent tumor cells. Our study demonstrates that cancer co-opts a mechanism similar to diapause with adaptive inactivation of Myc to persist during treatment.
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