Whitesell Luke, Santagata Sandro, Mendillo Marc L, Lin Nancy U, Proia David A, Lindquist Susan
Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, Cambridge, MA 02142;
Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, Cambridge, MA 02142; Department of Pathology, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115;
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2014 Dec 23;111(51):18297-302. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1421323111. Epub 2014 Dec 8.
The efficacy of hormonal therapies for advanced estrogen receptor-positive breast cancers is limited by the nearly inevitable development of acquired resistance. Efforts to block the emergence of resistance have met with limited success, largely because the mechanisms underlying it are so varied and complex. Here, we investigate a new strategy aimed at the very processes by which cancers evolve resistance. From yeast to vertebrates, heat shock protein 90 (HSP90) plays a unique role among molecular chaperones by promoting the evolution of heritable new traits. It does so by regulating the folding of a diverse portfolio of metastable client proteins, many of which mediate adaptive responses that allow organisms to adapt and thrive in the face of diverse challenges, including those posed by drugs. Guided by our previous work in pathogenic fungi, in which very modest HSP90 inhibition impairs resistance to mechanistically diverse antifungals, we examined the effect of similarly modest HSP90 inhibition on the emergence of resistance to antiestrogens in breast cancer models. Even though this degree of inhibition fell below the threshold for proteotoxic activation of the heat-shock response and had no overt anticancer activity on its own, it dramatically impaired the emergence of resistance to hormone antagonists both in cell culture and in mice. Our findings strongly support the clinical testing of combined hormone antagonist-low-level HSP90 inhibitor regimens in the treatment of metastatic estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer. At a broader level, they also provide promising proof of principle for a generalizable strategy to combat the pervasive problem of rapidly emerging resistance to molecularly targeted therapeutics.
激素疗法对晚期雌激素受体阳性乳腺癌的疗效受到几乎不可避免的获得性耐药发展的限制。阻止耐药性出现的努力取得的成功有限,主要是因为其潜在机制多种多样且复杂。在此,我们研究一种针对癌症产生耐药性的过程的新策略。从酵母到脊椎动物,热休克蛋白90(HSP90)在分子伴侣中发挥独特作用,促进可遗传新性状的进化。它通过调节一系列不稳定的客户蛋白的折叠来实现这一点,其中许多蛋白介导适应性反应,使生物体能够面对包括药物带来的各种挑战时适应并茁壮成长。基于我们之前在致病真菌方面的工作(在该工作中,非常适度的HSP90抑制会损害对机制多样的抗真菌药物的耐药性),我们研究了类似适度的HSP90抑制对乳腺癌模型中抗雌激素耐药性出现的影响。尽管这种抑制程度低于热休克反应的蛋白毒性激活阈值,且自身没有明显的抗癌活性,但它在细胞培养和小鼠中都显著损害了对激素拮抗剂耐药性的出现。我们的研究结果有力支持了联合激素拮抗剂 - 低水平HSP90抑制剂方案用于治疗转移性雌激素受体阳性乳腺癌的临床试验。在更广泛的层面上,它们也为应对分子靶向治疗迅速出现耐药性这一普遍问题的通用策略提供了有前景的原理证明。