Targeting the ALK–CDK9-Tyr19 kinase cascade sensitizes ovarian and breast tumors to PARP inhibition via destabilization of the P-TEFb complex

Author:

Chu Yu-Yi,Chen Mei-KuangORCID,Wei Yongkun,Lee Heng-HuanORCID,Xia Weiya,Wang Ying-NaiORCID,Yam Clinton,Hsu Jennifer L.,Wang Hung-Ling,Chang Wei-Chao,Yamaguchi Hirohito,Jiang ZhouORCID,Liu Chunxiao,Li Ching-Fei,Nie Lei,Chan Li-Chuan,Gao YuanORCID,Wang Shao-ChunORCID,Liu JinsongORCID,Westin Shannon N.ORCID,Lee Sanghoon,Sood Anil K.ORCID,Yang LiuqingORCID,Hortobagyi Gabriel N.ORCID,Yu DihuaORCID,Hung Mien-ChieORCID

Abstract

AbstractPoly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitors have demonstrated promising clinical activity in multiple cancers. However, resistance to PARP inhibitors remains a substantial clinical challenge. In the present study, we report that anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) directly phosphorylates CDK9 at tyrosine-19 to promote homologous recombination (HR) repair and PARP inhibitor resistance. Phospho-CDK9-Tyr19 increases its kinase activity and nuclear localization to stabilize positive transcriptional elongation factor b and activate polymerase II-dependent transcription of HR-repair genes. Conversely, ALK inhibition increases ubiquitination and degradation of CDK9 by Skp2, an E3 ligase. Notably, combination of US Food and Drug Administration-approved ALK and PARP inhibitors markedly reduce tumor growth and improve survival of mice in PARP inhibitor-/platinum-resistant tumor xenograft models. Using human tumor biospecimens, we further demonstrate that phosphorylated ALK (p-ALK) expression is associated with resistance to PARP inhibitors and positively correlated with p-Tyr19-CDK9 expression. Together, our findings support a biomarker-driven, combinatorial treatment strategy involving ALK and PARP inhibitors to induce synthetic lethality in PARP inhibitor-/platinum-resistant tumors with high p-ALK–p-Tyr19-CDK9 expression.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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