Lung cancer is the most common cause of cancer deaths. The expression of the transcription factor C/EBP? (CCAAT/enhancer binding protein a) is frequently lost in non-small cell lung cancer, but the mechanisms by which C/EBP? suppresses tumor formation are not fully understood. In addition, no pharmacological therapy is available to specifically target C/EBP? expression. We discovered a subset of pulmonary adenocarcinoma patients in whom negative/low C/EBP? expression and positive expression of the oncogenic protein BMI1 (B lymphoma Mo-MLV insertion region 1 homolog) have prognostic value. We also generated a lung-specific mouse model of C/EBP? deletion that develops lung adenocarcinomas, which are prevented by Bmi1 haploinsufficiency. BMI1 activity is required for both tumor initiation and maintenance in the C/EBP?-null background, and pharmacological inhibition of BMI1 exhibits antitumor effects in both murine and human adenocarcinoma lines. Overall, we show that C/EBP? is a tumor suppressor in lung cancer and that BMI1 is required for the oncogenic process downstream of C/EBP? loss. Therefore, anti-BMI1 pharmacological inhibition may offer a therapeutic benefit for lung cancer patients with low expression of C/EBP? and high BMI1.

Targeted BMI1 inhibition impairs tumor growth in lung adenocarcinomas with low CEBPa expression

Maroni G;Magli MC;Levantini E
2016

Abstract

Lung cancer is the most common cause of cancer deaths. The expression of the transcription factor C/EBP? (CCAAT/enhancer binding protein a) is frequently lost in non-small cell lung cancer, but the mechanisms by which C/EBP? suppresses tumor formation are not fully understood. In addition, no pharmacological therapy is available to specifically target C/EBP? expression. We discovered a subset of pulmonary adenocarcinoma patients in whom negative/low C/EBP? expression and positive expression of the oncogenic protein BMI1 (B lymphoma Mo-MLV insertion region 1 homolog) have prognostic value. We also generated a lung-specific mouse model of C/EBP? deletion that develops lung adenocarcinomas, which are prevented by Bmi1 haploinsufficiency. BMI1 activity is required for both tumor initiation and maintenance in the C/EBP?-null background, and pharmacological inhibition of BMI1 exhibits antitumor effects in both murine and human adenocarcinoma lines. Overall, we show that C/EBP? is a tumor suppressor in lung cancer and that BMI1 is required for the oncogenic process downstream of C/EBP? loss. Therefore, anti-BMI1 pharmacological inhibition may offer a therapeutic benefit for lung cancer patients with low expression of C/EBP? and high BMI1.
2016
Istituto di Tecnologie Biomediche - ITB
cebpa tumor suppressor
knock out mice
transgenic mice
novel therapeutic treatment for lung cancer
xenograft mice
BMI1 oncogene as novel therapeutic target in lung cancer
in vivo drug treatment
preclinical murine models of disease
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/333572
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