Resistance to BET Bromodomain Inhibitors Is Mediated by Kinome Reprogramming in Ovarian Cancer

Alison Kurimchak(Fox Chase Cancer Center), Claude Shelton(Fox Chase Cancer Center), Kelly Duncan(Fox Chase Cancer Center), Katherine J. Johnson(Fox Chase Cancer Center), Jennifer Brown(Fox Chase Cancer Center), Shane W. O’Brien(Fox Chase Cancer Center), Rashid Gabbasov(Fox Chase Cancer Center), Lauren S. Fink(Fox Chase Cancer Center), Yuesheng Li(Fox Chase Cancer Center), Nicole Lounsbury(Temple University), Magid Abou‐Gharbia(Temple University), Wayne E. Childers(Temple University), Denise C. Connolly(Fox Chase Cancer Center), Jonathan Chernoff(Fox Chase Cancer Center), Jeffrey R. Peterson(Fox Chase Cancer Center), James S. Duncan(Fox Chase Cancer Center)
Cell Reports
July 21, 2016
Cited by 201Open Access
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Abstract

Small-molecule BET bromodomain inhibitors (BETis) are actively being pursued in clinical trials for the treatment of a variety of cancers, but the mechanisms of resistance to BETis remain poorly understood. Using a mass spectrometry approach that globally measures kinase signaling at the proteomic level, we evaluated the response of the kinome to targeted BETi treatment in a panel of BRD4-dependent ovarian carcinoma (OC) cell lines. Despite initial inhibitory effects of BETi, OC cells acquired resistance following sustained treatment with the BETi JQ1. Through application of multiplexed inhibitor beads (MIBs) and mass spectrometry, we demonstrate that BETi resistance is mediated by adaptive kinome reprogramming, where activation of compensatory pro-survival kinase networks overcomes BET protein inhibition. Furthermore, drug combinations blocking these kinases may prevent or delay the development of drug resistance and enhance the efficacy of BETi therapy.


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