4.8 Article

CDK7 inhibition suppresses aberrant hedgehog pathway and overcomes resistance to smoothened antagonists

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1815780116

Keywords

THZ1; CDK7 inhibition; hedgehog pathway; smoothened inhibitor; medulloblastoma

Funding

  1. Chinese Universities Scientific Fund
  2. Recruitment Program of Global Experts of China
  3. Program for Professor of Special Appointment (Eastern Scholar) at Shanghai Institutions of Higher Learning
  4. Shanghai Rising-Star Program
  5. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81572761, 81772655, 81500601, 81572501, 31871332]
  6. Shanghai Jiao Tong University [YG2016MS74]
  7. Shanghai Xin Hua Hospital [JZPI201701]
  8. ShanghaiTech Startup fund
  9. high-performance computing platform of ShanghaiTech University
  10. Shanghai Shen Kang Hospital Development Center [16CR2031B]
  11. Shanghai Science and Technology Committee [17411951800]
  12. Shanghai Municipal Natural Science Foundation [14ZR1413800]
  13. Chinese National Science Foundation for Young Scholars [81702453]
  14. Research Project of Shanghai Science and Technology Committee [17411965700]
  15. Joint Research of Medicine and Industry of Shanghai Jiao Tong University [YG2015QN42]

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The aberrant hedgehog (Hh) pathway plays important roles in multiple cancer types, therefore serving as a promising drug target. Current clinically available hedgehog-targeted drugs act mostly by antagonizing the upstream component smoothened; however, both primary and acquired resistance to FDA-approved smoothened inhibitor (SMOi) drugs have been described. We have recently demonstrated that the BET inhibitor effectively suppresses SMOi-resistant Hh-driven cancers through antagonizing transcription of GLI1 and GLI2, the core transcriptional factors of Hh pathway, suggesting epigenetic or transcriptional targeted therapy represents an anti-Hh therapeutic strategy that can overcome SMOi resistance. Here we performed an unbiased screening of epigenetic or transcriptional targeted small molecules to test their inhibitory effects on GLI1 and GLI2 transcription or cell viability of Hh-driven tumor lines. THZ1, a covalent inhibitor of cyclin-dependent kinase 7 (CDK7), is identified as the top hit in our screening. We then confirmed that antagonizing CDK7 by either small-molecule inhibitors or the CRISPR-Cas9 approach causes substantial suppression of GLI1 and GLI2 transcription, resulting in effective inhibition of Hh-driven cancers in vitro and in vivo. More importantly, antagonizing CDK7 retains inhibitory activity against Hh-driven cancers with almost all sofar described primary or acquired SMOi resistance. Furthermore, we reveal a synergy between CDK7 inhibition and BET inhibition on antagonizing aberrant Hh pathway and Hh-driven cancers that are either responsive or resistant to SMOi. Our results illustrate transcriptional inhibition through targeting CDK7 as a promising therapeutic strategy for treating Hh-driven cancers, especially those with primary or acquired resistance to SMOi drugs.

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