Targeting BET Bromodomains in Cancer Mechanisms of Sensitivity and Resistance
Besides DNA mutations, cancers harbor complex aberrations of the epigenetic landscape, which are reversible and amenable to pharmacologic intervention. Therapeutic targeting of chromatin regulators has shown great promise in first...
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Descripción del proyecto
Besides DNA mutations, cancers harbor complex aberrations of the epigenetic landscape, which are reversible and amenable to pharmacologic intervention. Therapeutic targeting of chromatin regulators has shown great promise in first clinical studies, and this has triggered a massive effort to explore this machinery in academic and pharmaceutical research. Recently, the bromodomain and extraterminal domain (BET) containing protein 4 (BRD4), a reader of histone-acetyl marks, has emerged as a promising therapeutic target, and newly identified small-molecule BET inhibitors have shown impressive effects in preclinical cancer models. Unlike most established drug targets, BRD4 is typically not mutated or overexpressed in sensitive cell types, yet different cancer contexts show vast differences in their sensitivity to BET inhibition. This suggests that cancer cells can become non-oncogene addicted to BRD4. However, the mechanistic basis for this phenomenon remains elusive and so far no biomarker could be identified for predicting the sensitivity or resistance to BET inhibition. Moreover, preliminary results in an AML mouse model suggest that cells can rapidly become resistant to BRD4 inhibition, most likely through an epigenetic mechanism. This project will use an innovative approach combining proteomic profiling, advanced RNAi technologies and experimentally tractable mouse models of cancer to systematically identify and functionally characterize molecular determinants of sensitivity and resistance to BET inhibition. Advancing this mechanistic understanding will not only be critical for the further development of BET inhibitors in the clinic, but may reveal other key players that might be interesting as complementary or alternative target molecules. We believe that this study will contribute to a better understanding of epigenetic mechanisms in cancer and therapy resistance, which will be essential for further exploring this promising class of therapeutic targets.