Inhibition of mTOR-kinase destabilizes MYCN and is a potential therapy for MYCN-dependent tumors.
Name:
10544-160500-5-PB.pdf
Size:
8.661Mb
Format:
PDF
Description:
Open access full text article
Authors
Vaughan, LynseyClarke, P
Barker, K
Chanthery, Y
Gustafson, C
Tucker, E
Renshaw, J
Raynaud, F
Li, X
Burke, R
Jamin, Y
Robinson, S
Pearson, A
Maira, M
Weiss, W
Workman, P
Chesler, L
Affiliation
Division of Clinical Studies, The Institute of Cancer Research, Sutton, Surrey, UKIssue Date
2016-07-12
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
MYC oncoproteins deliver a potent oncogenic stimulus in several human cancers, making them major targets for drug development, but efforts to deliver clinically practical therapeutics have not yet been realized. In childhood cancer, aberrant expression of MYC and MYCN genes delineates a group of aggressive tumours responsible for a major proportion of pediatric cancer deaths. We designed a chemical-genetic screen that identifies compounds capable of enhancing proteasomal elimination of MYCN oncoprotein. We isolated several classes of compound that selectively kill MYCN expressing cells and we focus on inhibitors of PI3K/mTOR pathway in this study. We show that PI3K/mTOR inhibitors selectively killed MYCN-expressing neuroblastoma tumor cells, and induced significant apoptosis of transgenic MYCN-driven neuroblastoma tumors concomitant with elimination of MYCN protein in vivo. Mechanistically, the ability of these compounds to degrade MYCN requires complete blockade of mTOR but not PI3 kinase activity and we highlight NVP-BEZ235 as a PI3K/mTOR inhibitor with an ideal activity profile. These data establish that MYCN expression is a marker indicative of likely clinical sensitivity to mTOR inhibition, and provide a rationale for the selection of clinical candidate MYCN-destabilizers likely to be useful for the treatment of MYCN-driven cancers.Citation
Inhibition of mTOR-kinase destabilizes MYCN and is a potential therapy for MYCN-dependent tumors. 2016: OncotargetJournal
OncotargetDOI
10.18632/oncotarget.10544PubMed ID
27438153Type
ArticleLanguage
en_USISSN
1949-2553ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.18632/oncotarget.10544
Scopus Count
Collections
Related articles
- Synergistic efficacy of inhibiting MYCN and mTOR signaling against neuroblastoma.
- Authors: Kling MJ, Griggs CN, McIntyre EM, Alexander G, Ray S, Challagundla KB, Joshi SS, Coulter DW, Chaturvedi NK
- Issue date: 2021 Sep 26
- Molecular rationale for the use of PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway inhibitors in combination with crizotinib in ALK-mutated neuroblastoma.
- Authors: Moore NF, Azarova AM, Bhatnagar N, Ross KN, Drake LE, Frumm S, Liu QS, Christie AL, Sanda T, Chesler L, Kung AL, Gray NS, Stegmaier K, George RE
- Issue date: 2014 Sep 30
- Paracrine signaling through MYCN enhances tumor-vascular interactions in neuroblastoma.
- Authors: Chanthery YH, Gustafson WC, Itsara M, Persson A, Hackett CS, Grimmer M, Charron E, Yakovenko S, Kim G, Matthay KK, Weiss WA
- Issue date: 2012 Jan 4
- MCPIP1 Exogenous Overexpression Inhibits Pathways Regulating MYCN Oncoprotein Stability in Neuroblastoma.
- Authors: Boratyn E, Nowak I, Durbas M, Horwacik I, Sawicka A, Rokita H
- Issue date: 2017 Jul
- Inhibitors of mammalian target of rapamycin downregulate MYCN protein expression and inhibit neuroblastoma growth in vitro and in vivo.
- Authors: Johnsen JI, Segerström L, Orrego A, Elfman L, Henriksson M, Kågedal B, Eksborg S, Sveinbjörnsson B, Kogner P
- Issue date: 2008 May 1