4.5 Article

MCM10 compensates for Myc-induced DNA replication stress in breast cancer stem-like cells

Journal

CANCER SCIENCE
Volume 112, Issue 3, Pages 1209-1224

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cas.14776

Keywords

anticancer drug resistance; breast cancer; cancer stem cell; c-Myc; DNA replication stress; drug sensitivity/drug resistance-relating factors/gene expression analysis; MCM; oncogenes and tumor-suppressor genes; others; tumor spheroids

Categories

Funding

  1. Cancer Research Institute, Kanazawa University [17-2924]
  2. JSPS [16H06279, 17K19587, 18H02679]
  3. AMED Project for Development of Innovative Research on Cancer Therapeutics, Project for Cancer Research and Therapeutic Evolution [16cm0106120h0001, 16ck0106194h0001]
  4. MEXT KAKENHI [221S0002]
  5. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [18H02679, 17K19587] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The study reveals that c-Myc expression induces stronger DNA replication stress in patient-derived breast CSCs, with MCM10 playing a critical role in compensating for this stress. The expression of MCM10 is upregulated in CSCs and maintained by c-Myc, leading to the activation of dormant replication origins to ensure replication progress in the presence of c-Myc-mediated collisions between RNA transcription and DNA replication machinery in the nuclei. Additionally, patient-derived breast CSCs are found to be dependent on MCM10 for their maintenance, even after enrichment for CSCs resistant to paclitaxel, suggesting a potential target for preventing drug resistance and tumor recurrence.
Cancer stem-like cells (CSCs) induce drug resistance and recurrence of tumors when they experience DNA replication stress. However, the mechanisms underlying DNA replication stress in CSCs and its compensation remain unclear. Here, we demonstrate that upregulated c-Myc expression induces stronger DNA replication stress in patient-derived breast CSCs than in differentiated cancer cells. Our results suggest critical roles for mini-chromosome maintenance protein 10 (MCM10), a firing (activating) factor of DNA replication origins, to compensate for DNA replication stress in CSCs. MCM10 expression is upregulated in CSCs and is maintained by c-Myc. c-Myc-dependent collisions between RNA transcription and DNA replication machinery may occur in nuclei, thereby causing DNA replication stress. MCM10 may activate dormant replication origins close to these collisions to ensure the progression of replication. Moreover, patient-derived breast CSCs were found to be dependent on MCM10 for their maintenance, even after enrichment for CSCs that were resistant to paclitaxel, the standard chemotherapeutic agent. Further, MCM10 depletion decreased the growth of cancer cells, but not of normal cells. Therefore, MCM10 may robustly compensate for DNA replication stress and facilitate genome duplication in cancer cells in the S-phase, which is more pronounced in CSCs. Overall, we provide a preclinical rationale to target the c-Myc-MCM10 axis for preventing drug resistance and recurrence of tumors.

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