Abstract

Anaplastic thyroid cancer (ATC) is an aggressive malignancy with limited options for treatment. Targeting epigenetic modifications via interfering with the interaction between the bromodomain and extra-terminal domain (BET) proteins and acetylated histones by using BET inhibitors (e.g., JQ1) has shown some efficacy in thyroid cancer. To improve the efficacy, an inhibitor of MEK, trametinib, was tested together with JQ1 as a combined treatment via cell-based approaches and xenograft studies. We examined the effects of combined treatment of JQ1 and trametinib on the proliferation of human ATC cell lines (THJ-11T and THJ-16) in vitro. We further evaluated the effects of the combined treatment on tumor development in vivo using mouse xenograft models. We elucidated the underlying molecular pathways affected by double treatment. We showed that the combined treatment totally blocked proliferation, while either JQ1 or trametinib alone only had partial effects. Combined treatment suppressed MYC expression more than single treatment, resulting in decreased expression of pro-survival regulators and increased pro-apoptotic regulators to collaboratively induce apoptosis. In xenograft studies, single treatment only partially inhibited tumor growth, but the combined treatment inhbited tumor growth by >90%. The reduction of tumor growth was mediated by synergistic suppression of MYC, to affect apoptotic regulators to markedly promote tumor apoptosis. Combined treatment of BET and MEK-ERK inhibitors was more effective to treat ATC than single targeted treatment. Synergistic suppression of MYC transcription via collaborative actions on chromatin modifications suggested that targeting epigenetic modifications could provide novel treatment opportunities for ATC.

Highlights

  • Anaplastic thyroid cancer (ATC) is one of the most aggressive malignancies

  • We evaluated the effect of JQ, trametinib, and the combined treatment of the two on the proliferation of two human ATC cell lines: THJ-11T, THJ-16T

  • In line with these findings, we recently reported that in a mouse model of anaplastic thyroid cancer (ThrbPV/PVKrasG12D mice), treatment of mutant mice with JQ1 inhibited thyroid tumor growth

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Anaplastic thyroid cancer (ATC) is one of the most aggressive malignancies. This cancer has poor prognosis and effective treatment modalities are very limited. Among the genetic and epigenetic abnormalities recently identified in ATC, MYC was uncovered as a critical oncogene in promoting the development and progression of thyroid cancer [1, 2]. In a mouse model of ATC, increased expression of Myc was shown to promote thyroid cancer progression [5]. When MYC expression was blocked by antisense oligonucleotides, the proliferation of human thyroid cancer cell lines was inhibited [6]. These observations suggested that MYC could be a potential target for therapeutic intervention in ATC

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call