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Increased lysosomal biomass is responsible for the resistance of triple-negative breast cancers to CDK4/6 inhibition.

Anne FasslChristopher BrainMonther Abu-RemailehIga StukanDeborah ButterPiotr StepienAvery S FeitJohann BergholzWojciech MichowskiTobias OttoQing ShengAlice LooWalter MichaelRalph TiedtCarmine DeAngelisRachel SchiffBaishan JiangBojana JovanovicKarolina NowakMaria EricssonMichael D CameronNathanael S GrayDeborah DillonJean J ZhaoDavid M SabatiniRinath M JeselsohnMyles BrownKornelia PolyakPiotr Sicinski
Published in: Science advances (2020)
Inhibitors of cyclin-dependent kinases CDK4 and CDK6 have been approved for treatment of hormone receptor-positive breast cancers. In contrast, triple-negative breast cancers (TNBCs) are resistant to CDK4/6 inhibition. Here, we demonstrate that a subset of TNBC critically requires CDK4/6 for proliferation, and yet, these TNBC are resistant to CDK4/6 inhibition due to sequestration of CDK4/6 inhibitors into tumor cell lysosomes. This sequestration is caused by enhanced lysosomal biogenesis and increased lysosomal numbers in TNBC cells. We developed new CDK4/6 inhibitor compounds that evade the lysosomal sequestration and are efficacious against resistant TNBC. We also show that coadministration of lysosomotropic or lysosome-destabilizing compounds (an antibiotic azithromycin, an antidepressant siramesine, an antimalaria compound chloroquine) renders resistant tumor cells sensitive to currently used CDK4/6 inhibitors. Lastly, coinhibition of CDK2 arrested proliferation of CDK4/6 inhibitor-resistant cells. These observations may extend the use of CDK4/6 inhibitors to TNBCs that are refractory to current anti-CDK4/6 therapies.
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