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

Author:

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 RomanORCID,Kessler Benedikt,Gokhale Prafulla C.,Signoretti Sabina,Spektor Alexander,Kreatsoulas Constantine,Singh Rajinder,Earp David J.,Garcia Pablo D.,Nijhawan Deepak,Oser Matthew G.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractCancer 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.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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