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Inhibition of the integrin/FAK signaling axis and c-Myc synergistically disrupts ovarian cancer malignancy

Authors :
Zeyi Liu
Jian-An Huang
Olivier Thibault
D.K. St. Clair
Lawrence D. Brewer
J. Lefringhouse
C. Ou
Bingwei Xu
Li Chen
Lauren A. Baldwin
J.R. van Nagell
Dava S. West
Dana Napier
Binhua P. Zhou
Michael Lu
Luksana Chaiswing
Frederick R. Ueland
Ronny Drapkin
Xiuwei H. Yang
Source :
Oncogenesis
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2017.

Abstract

Integrins, a family of heterodimeric receptors for extracellular matrix, are promising therapeutic targets for ovarian cancer, particularly high-grade serous-type (HGSOC), as they drive tumor cell attachment, migration, proliferation and survival by activating focal adhesion kinase (FAK)-dependent signaling. Owing to the potential off-target effects of FAK inhibitors, disruption of the integrin signaling axis remains to be a challenge. Here, we tackled this barrier by screening for inhibitors being functionally cooperative with small-molecule VS-6063, a phase II FAK inhibitor. From this screening, JQ1, a potent inhibitor of Myc oncogenic network, emerged as the most robust collaborator. Treatment with a combination of VS-6063 and JQ1 synergistically caused an arrest of tumor cells at the G2/M phase and a decrease in the XIAP-linked cell survival. Our subsequent mechanistic analyses indicate that this functional cooperation was strongly associated with the concomitant disruption of activation or expression of FAK and c-Myc as well as their downstream signaling through the PI3K/Akt pathway. In line with these observations, we detected a strong co-amplification or upregulation at genomic or protein level for FAK and c-Myc in a large portion of primary tumors in the TCGA or a local HGSOC patient cohort. Taken together, our results suggest that the integrin–FAK signaling axis and c-Myc synergistically drive cell proliferation, survival and oncogenic potential in HGSOC. As such, our study provides key genetic, functional and signaling bases for the small-molecule-based co-targeting of these two distinct oncogenic drivers as a new line of targeted therapy against human ovarian cancer.

Details

ISSN :
21579024
Volume :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Oncogenesis
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d891f5e8b4dc9e65862bb2a358a5d98c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/oncsis.2016.86