MYC is implicated in the development and progression of Pancreatic cancer, yet the precise level of MYC deregulation required to contribute to tumour development has been difficult to define.We used modestly elevated expression of human MYC, driven from the Rosa26 locus, to investigate the pancreatic phenotypes arising in mice from an approximation of MYC trisomy. We show that this level of MYC alone suffices to drive pancreatic neuroendocrine tumours, and to accelerate progression of KRAS-initiated precursor lesions to metastatic pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma. Our phenotype exposed suppression of the Type I Interferon pathway by the combined actions of MYC and KRAS and we present evidence of repressive MYC/MIZ1 complexes binding directly to the promoters of type I Interferon regulators IRF5, IRF7, STAT1 and STAT2. Derepression of Interferon regulators allows pancreatic tumour infiltration of B and NK cells, resulting in increased survival.
Exploiting oxidative stress has recently emerged as a plausible strategy for treatment of human cancer, and antioxidant defenses are implicated in resistance to chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Targeted suppression of antioxidant defenses could thus broadly improve therapeutic outcomes. Here, we identify the AMPK-related kinase NUAK1 as a key component of the antioxidant stress response pathway and reveal a specific requirement for this role of NUAK1 in colorectal cancer. We show that NUAK1 is activated by oxidative stress and that this activation is required to facilitate nuclear import of the antioxidant master regulator NRF2: Activation of NUAK1 coordinates PP1β inhibition with AKT activation in order to suppress GSK3β-dependent inhibition of NRF2 nuclear import. Deletion of NUAK1 suppresses formation of colorectal tumors, whereas acute depletion of NUAK1 induces regression of preexisting autochthonous tumors. Importantly, elevated expression of NUAK1 in human colorectal cancer is associated with more aggressive disease and reduced overall survival. This work identifies NUAK1 as a key facilitator of the adaptive antioxidant response that is associated with aggressive disease and worse outcome in human colorectal cancer. Our data suggest that transient NUAK1 inhibition may provide a safe and effective means for treatment of human colorectal cancer via disruption of intrinsic antioxidant defenses. .
KRAS is the most frequently mutated driver oncogene in human adenocarcinoma of the lung. There are presently no clinically proven strategies for treatment of KRAS-driven lung cancer. Activating mutations in KRAS are thought to confer independence from upstream signaling; however, recent data suggest that this independence may not be absolute. We show that initiation and progression of KRAS-driven lung tumors require input from ERBB family receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs): Multiple ERBB RTKs are expressed and active from the earliest stages of KRAS-driven lung tumor development, and treatment with a multi-ERBB inhibitor suppresses formation of KRAS-driven lung tumors. We present evidence that ERBB activity amplifies signaling through the core RAS pathway, supporting proliferation of KRAS-mutant tumor cells in culture and progression to invasive disease in vivo. Brief pharmacological inhibition of the ERBB network enhances the therapeutic benefit of MEK (mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase) inhibition in an autochthonous tumor setting. Our data suggest that lung cancer patients with KRAS-driven disease may benefit from inclusion of multi-ERBB inhibitors in rationally designed treatment strategies.
In image-based profiling, software extracts thousands of morphological features of cells from multi-channel fluorescence microscopy images, yielding single-cell profiles that can be used for basic research and drug discovery. Powerful applications have been proven, including clustering chemical and genetic perturbations based on their similar morphological impact, identifying disease phenotypes by observing differences in profiles between healthy and diseased cells, and predicting assay outcomes using machine learning, among many others. Here we provide an updated protocol for the most popular assay for image-based profiling, Cell Painting. Introduced in 2013, it uses six stains imaged in five channels and labels eight diverse components of the cell: DNA, cytoplasmic RNA, nucleoli, actin, golgi apparatus, plasma membrane, endoplasmic reticulum, and mitochondria. The original protocol was updated in 2016 based on several years' experience running it at two sites, after optimizing it by visual stain quality. Here we describe the work of the Joint Undertaking for Morphological Profiling (JUMP) Cell Painting Consortium, aiming to improve upon the assay via quantitative optimization, based on the measured ability of the assay to detect morphological phenotypes and group similar perturbations together. We find that the assay gives very robust outputs despite a variety of changes to the protocol and that two vendors' dyes work equivalently well. We present Cell Painting version 3, in which some steps are simplified and several stain concentrations can be reduced, saving costs. Cell culture and image acquisition take 1 to 2 weeks for a typically sized batch of 20 or fewer plates; feature extraction and data analysis take an additional 1 to 2 weeks.
Abstract:The discovery that the 5'AMP-activated protein kinase, AMPK, serves to link the tumour suppressors LKB1 and the Tuberous Scelorsis Complex (TSC), and functions to slow macromolecular synthesis through attenuation of the mechanistic Target of Rapamycin Complex 1 (mTORC1), revealed a role for AMPK in tumour suppression. On the other hand, the well-recognized role of AMPK in maintaining ATP homeostasis, through suppression of anabolism and promotion of catabolism, as well as the role of AMPK in neutralising reactive oxygen species (ROS), via maintenance of NADPH-dependent reductive capacity, point to tumour-protective roles in the context of metabolic stress, which is a key feature of many solid tumours. A growing number of studies thus suggest a duality of functions for AMPK that are either pro-or anti-cancer, depending upon context. Importantly, AMPK is comprised of 3 subunits and multiple isoforms exist for all three, allowing for different permutations to assemble and the potential for specific AMPK complexes to regulate distinct cellular Author Manuscript Monteverde et al. FEBS ReviewThis article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved processes. Moreover, certain subunits of the AMPK complex are frequently overexpressed in a spectrum of human cancer types, suggesting an outright oncogenic function for specific AMPK complexes. Adding complexity to this picture, the catalytic AMPK alpha subunits belong to a family of 14 kinases that can all be activated by LKB1 and studies are beginning to reveal a similar duality of roles in cancer for other members of the AMPK-related kinase family.Cancer cells divert enormous resources into fuelling the growth required to sustain their unscheduled proliferation. Commonly arising oncogenic mutations resulting in RAS and PI3K pathway activation, p53 inactivation or MYC overexpression, directly impinge upon core cellular metabolism, at once driving proliferation and at the same time signalling to cells to redirect the breakdown products of nutrients into the synthesis of macromolecules required for cell growth [1, 2]. This diversion of nutrients comes at a cost however and cancer cells must continuously rebalance their rate of macromolecular synthesis and cell growth with the energetic cost of supporting that growth, measured in ATP. The fragility of this balancing act is underscored by the observation that cancer cells often exhibit exquisite sensitivity to nutrient deprivation, rapidly undergoing cell death where non-transformed counterparts respond by downregulating proliferative signalling and undergoing arrest [3][4][5][6]. In the context of a growing solid tumour, cancer cells are continuously exposed to a range of pathophysiological metabolic strains, including nutrient limitation, hypoxia and microenvironment acidification, owing to the inefficient and disorganised nature of the tumour vasculature.Indeed, poorly vascularised tumour regions typically show high levels of necrotic cell death [7]. Strategies to exploit the intrinsic metabolic vulnerabilities...
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