Publications
bioRxiv : the preprint server for biologyAug 2024 DOI:
10.1101/2024.08.01.605889

Cyclin A/B RxL Macrocyclic Inhibitors to Treat Cancers with High E2F Activity

Singh, Shilpa; Gleason, Catherine E; Fang, Min; Laimon, Yasmin N; Khivansara, Vishal; Xie, Shanhai; Durmaz, Yavuz T; Sarkar, Aniruddha; Ngo, Kenneth; Savla, Varunika; Li, Yixiang; Abu-Remaileh, Muhannad; Li, Xinyue; Tuladhar, Bishma; Odeh, Ranya; Hamkins-Indik, Frances; He, Daphne; Membreno, Miles W; Nosrati, Meisam; Gushwa, Nathan N; Leung, Siegfried S F; Fraga-Walton, Breena; Hernandez, Luis; Baldomero, Miguel P; Lent, Bryan M; Spellmeyer, David; Luna, Joshua F; Hoang, Dalena; Gritsenko, Yuliana; Chand, Manesh; DeMart, Megan K; Metobo, Sammy; Bhatt, Chinmay; Shapiro, Justin A; Yang, Kai; Dupper, Nathan J; Bockus, Andrew T; Doench, John G; Aggen, James B; Liu, Li-Fen; Levin, Bernard; Wang, Evelyn W; Vendrell, Iolanda; Fischer, Roman; Kessler, Benedikt; Gokhale, Prafulla C; Signoretti, Sabina; Spektor, Alexander; Kreatsoulas, Constantine; Singh, Rajinder; Earp, David J; Garcia, Pablo D; Nijhawan, Deepak; Oser, Matthew G
Product Used
NGS
Abstract
Cancer cell proliferation requires precise control of E2F1 activity; excess activity promotes apoptosis. Here, we developed cell-permeable and bioavailable macrocycles that selectively kill small cell lung cancer (SCLC) cells with inherent high E2F1 activity by blocking RxL-mediated interactions of cyclin A and cyclin B with select substrates. Genome-wide CRISPR/Cas9 knockout and random mutagenesis screens found that cyclin A/B RxL macrocyclic inhibitors (cyclin A/Bi) induced apoptosis paradoxically by cyclin B- and Cdk2-dependent spindle assembly checkpoint activation (SAC). Mechanistically, cyclin A/Bi hyperactivate E2F1 and cyclin B by blocking their RxL-interactions with cyclin A and Myt1, respectively, ultimately leading to SAC activation and mitotic cell death. Base editor screens identified cyclin B variants that confer cyclin A/Bi resistance including several variants that disrupted cyclin B:Cdk interactions. Unexpectedly but consistent with our base editor and knockout screens, cyclin A/Bi induced the formation of neo-morphic Cdk2-cyclin B complexes that promote SAC activation and apoptosis. Finally, orally-bioavailable cyclin A/Bi robustly inhibited tumor growth in chemotherapy-resistant patient-derived xenograft models of SCLC. This work uncovers gain-of-function mechanisms by which cyclin A/Bi induce apoptosis in cancers with high E2F activity, and suggests cyclin A/Bi as a therapeutic strategy for SCLC and other cancers driven by high E2F activity.
Product Used
NGS

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