4.8 Article

Chemosensitive Relapse in Small Cell Lung Cancer Proceeds through an EZH2-SLFN11 Axis

Journal

CANCER CELL
Volume 31, Issue 2, Pages 286-299

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.ccell.2017.01.006

Keywords

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Funding

  1. LUNGevity Foundation
  2. American Lung Association
  3. Free To Breathe [R01 CA197936-01A1, U54 OD020355]
  4. MSKCC [P30 CA008748]
  5. Conquer Cancer Foundation of ASCO
  6. Radiological Society of North America [RR1634]
  7. NIH [UL1TR00457]
  8. VA Merit review [101CX001425-01]
  9. Van Andel Research Institute through the Van Andel Research Institute Stand Up To Cancer Epigenetics Dream Team

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Small cell lung cancer is initially highly responsive to cisplatin and etoposide but in almost every case becomes rapidly chemoresistant, leading to death within 1 year. We modeled acquired chemoresistance in vivo using a series of patient-derived xenografts to generate paired chemosensitive and chemoresistant cancers. Multiple chemoresistant models demonstrated suppression of SLFN11, a factor implicated in DNA-damage repair deficiency. In vivo silencing of SLFN11 was associated with marked deposition of H3K27me3, a histone modification placed by EZH2, within the gene body of SLFN11, inducing local chromatin condensation and gene silencing. Inclusion of an EZH2 inhibitor with standard cytotoxic therapies prevented emergence of acquired resistance and augmented chemotherapeutic efficacy in both chemosensitive and chemoresistant models of small cell lung cancer.

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