posted on 2023-02-02, 23:21authored byAIJ Young, AMK Law, L Castillo, S Chong, HD Cullen, M Koehler, S Herzog, T Brummer, Erinna LeeErinna Lee, Walter FairlieWalter Fairlie, MC Lucas, D Herrmann, Amr AllamAmr Allam, P Timpson, DN Watkins, EKA Millar, SA O'Toole, D Gallego-Ortega, CJ Ormandy, SR Oakes
Background: Metastatic disease is largely resistant to therapy and accounts for almost all cancer deaths. Myeloid cell leukemia-1 (MCL-1) is an important regulator of cell survival and chemo-resistance in a wide range of malignancies, and thus its inhibition may prove to be therapeutically useful. Methods: To examine whether targeting MCL-1 may provide an effective treatment for breast cancer, we constructed inducible models of BIMs2A expression (a specific MCL-1 inhibitor) in MDA-MB-468 (MDA-MB-468-2A) and MDA-MB-231 (MDA-MB-231-2A) cells. Results: MCL-1 inhibition caused apoptosis of basal-like MDA-MB-468-2A cells grown as monolayers, and sensitized them to the BCL-2/BCL-XL inhibitor ABT-263, demonstrating that MCL-1 regulated cell survival. In MDA-MB-231-2A cells, grown in an organotypic model, induction of BIMs2A produced an almost complete suppression of invasion. Apoptosis was induced in such a small proportion of these cells that it could not account for the large decrease in invasion, suggesting that MCL-1 was operating via a previously undetected mechanism. MCL-1 antagonism also suppressed local invasion and distant metastasis to the lung in mouse mammary intraductal xenografts. Kinomic profiling revealed that MCL-1 antagonism modulated Src family kinases and their targets, which suggested that MCL-1 might act as an upstream modulator of invasion via this pathway. Inhibition of MCL-1 in combination with dasatinib suppressed invasion in 3D models of invasion and inhibited the establishment of tumors in vivo. Conclusion: These data provide the first evidence that MCL-1 drives breast cancer cell invasion and suggests that MCL-1 antagonists could be used alone or in combination with drugs targeting Src kinases such as dasatinib to suppress metastasis.
Funding
This work was supported by grants from the National Breast Cancer Foundation (Fellowships ECF-13-08), UNSW Australian Postgraduate Award and German Research Foundation (GSC-4, Spemann Graduate School and the SFB850) (to MK and TB), Cure Cancer Australia Foundation, Cancer Council NSW, NHMRC Australia, ARC Future Fellowship (FT150100212) (to EFL), Banque Nationale de Paris-Paribas Australia & New Zealand, RT Hall Trust, The Mostyn Family Foundation, and Estee Lauder Australia. The Olivia Newton-John Cancer Research Institute and La Trobe University acknowledges the Operational Infrastructure Support Program of the Victorian Government, Australia for partial funding of this project. (to WDF and EFL).