Abstract

Cell cycle regulators have gain attention as potential targets for anticancer therapy. Palbociclib is a selective inhibitor of the cyclin-dependent kinases 4 and 6 (CDK4/6), which coordinate the G1-S transition. Palbociclib is currently approved for the treatment of hormone receptor positive, HER2-negative advanced breast cancer (BC) in association with letrozole or fulvestrant. In contrast, its efficacy in triple negative BC (TNBC), either alone or in combined therapies, has not been fully investigated to date. Here we evaluated the potential of combining palbociclib with PI3K/mTOR inhibitors in Rb-proficient TNBC cells comparing different schedules of treatment: simultaneous, sequential, or sequential combined treatment (pre-incubation with palbociclib followed by exposure to both palbociclib and PI3K/mTOR inhibitors). We assessed the effects on cell proliferation, cell death, and cell cycle distribution, and looked at the impact of such treatments on glucose metabolism. Palbociclib exerted cytostatic effects in Rb-positive TNBC cells, inducing a reversible blockade in G0/G1 cell cycle phase associated with down-regulation of CDK6, Rb, and c-myc expression and/or activity. Palbociclib treatment induced AKT signaling, providing a rationale for its combination with PI3K/mTOR inhibitors. The simultaneous or sequential treatment resulted in an additive inhibition of cell proliferation. On the other hand, the sequential combined treatment in which palbociclib was maintained also during exposure to PI3K/mTOR inhibitors gave rise to synergistic anti-proliferative and pro-apoptotic effects, by inhibiting both CDK4/6/Rb/myc and PI3K/mTOR signaling. Interestingly, the inhibition of the Rb/E2F/myc axis mediated by palbociclib resulted in a significant down-regulation of glucose metabolism; most importantly, these inhibitory effects were enhanced by the combination of palbociclib with BYL719 (specific inhibitor of the p110α PI3K-subunit), which promoted a stronger inhibition of GLUT-1 glucose transporter expression, glucose uptake and consumption in comparison with individual treatments, under both normoxic and hypoxic conditions. Combination of palbociclib with PI3K/mTOR inhibitors may represent a promising therapeutic option for the treatment of Rb-proficient TNBC, with the sequential combined schedule showing a superior efficacy over the other schedules. In addition our results demonstrate that the impairment of glucose metabolism may contribute to the anti-tumor activity of such drug combinations.

Highlights

  • Cell cycle regulators have gain attention as potential targets for anticancer therapy

  • Effects of palbociclib on cell proliferation and cell cycle distribution in triple negative breast cancer (BC) (TNBC) cells We firstly evaluated the effect of palbociclib on cell proliferation in a panel of TNBC cell lines (MDA-MB-231, MDA-MB-468, HCC38) in comparison with a estrogen receptor (ER)+ luminal-A BC cell line (MCF-7), that reflects the cancer histotype for which the drug is currently clinically used

  • We evaluated the effect of palbociclib on the expression of cell cycle-related proteins and observed that the treatment induced a decrease of p-retinoblastoma protein (Rb), Rb and p-CDK6 levels and a concomitant increase of cyclin D1 levels in a dose- and timedependent manner (Fig. 2a,b, respectively)

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Summary

Introduction

Cell cycle regulators have gain attention as potential targets for anticancer therapy. Palbociclib is currently approved for the treatment of hormone receptor positive, HER2-negative advanced breast cancer (BC) in association with letrozole or fulvestrant. Its efficacy in triple negative BC (TNBC), either alone or in combined therapies, has not been fully investigated to date. Tumors lacking the expression of such receptors are commonly referred to as Triple-negative BCs (TNBCs) (∼5%–10%) [2]. The development of gene expression profiling using high-throughput analysis has provided a molecular classification of BC into luminal A, luminal B, HER2-enriched, basal-like, claudin-low, and normal-like subtypes [3]. TNBCs are mostly basal-like and are associated with high aggressiveness and poor prognosis. Due to the lack of druggable targets, treatment of TNBC is based on chemotherapy and the identification of new targets is a high clinical priority

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