CDK9 inhibition as an effective therapy for small cell lung cancer

Valdez Capuccino, L.; Kleitke, T.; Szokol, B. [Szokol, Bálint (Gyógyszerkémia), author]; Svajda, L. [Svajda, Laura (onkológia), author] National Institute of Oncology; Martin, F.; Bonechi, F.; Krekó, M. [Krekó, Marcell (gyógyszerészi kémia), author] Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry (SU / FP); Azami, S.; Montinaro, A.; Wang, Y.; Nikolov, V.; Kaiser, L.; Bonasera, D.; Saggau, J.; Scholz, T.; Schmitt, A.; Beleggia, F.; Reinhardt, H. C.; George, J.; Liccardi, G.; Walczak, H.; Tóvári, J. [Tóvári, József (Daganatbiológia, ...), author] National Institute of Oncology; Brägelmann, J.; Montero, J.; Sos, M. L.; Őrfi, L. [Őrfi, László (Szerves- és Gyógy...), author] Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry (SU / FP); Peltzer, N. ✉

English Article (Journal Article) Scientific
Published: CELL DEATH AND DISEASE 2041-4889 2041-4889 15 (5) Paper: 345 , 12 p. 2024
  • SJR Scopus - Medicine (miscellaneous): D1
Identifiers
Fundings:
  • (National Tumor Biology Laboratory project—2022-2.1.1-NL-2022-00010)
  • Hungarian Thematic Excellence Program((TKP2021-EGA-44))
  • National Laboratories Excellence program (under the National Tumor Biology Laboratory Project(NLP-17)
Treatment-naïve small cell lung cancer (SCLC) is typically susceptible to standard-of-care chemotherapy consisting of cisplatin and etoposide recently combined with PD-L1 inhibitors. Yet, in most cases, SCLC patients develop resistance to first-line therapy and alternative therapies are urgently required to overcome this resistance. In this study, we tested the efficacy of dinaciclib, an FDA-orphan drug and inhibitor of the cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) 9, among other CDKs, in SCLC. Furthermore, we report on a newly developed, highly specific CDK9 inhibitor, VC-1, with tumour-killing activity in SCLC. CDK9 inhibition displayed high killing potential in a panel of mouse and human SCLC cell lines. Mechanistically, CDK9 inhibition led to a reduction in MCL-1 and cFLIP anti-apoptotic proteins and killed cells, almost exclusively, by intrinsic apoptosis. While CDK9 inhibition did not synergise with chemotherapy, it displayed high efficacy in chemotherapy-resistant cells. In vivo, CDK9 inhibition effectively reduced tumour growth and improved survival in both autochthonous and syngeneic SCLC models. Together, this study shows that CDK9 inhibition is a promising therapeutic agent against SCLC and could be applied to chemo-refractory or resistant SCLC.
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2025-04-02 01:20