Abstract Despite advances in immune and targeted therapies, chemotherapy remains the primary treatment for ovarian cancer (OvCa) patients. Unfortunately, most OvCa patients develop chemotherapy-resistant disease that is inevitably fatal. Quiescence is an important yet poorly understood mechanism underlying chemotherapy resistance. Therefore, we aimed to characterize quiescent ovarian cancer (qOvCa) cells to identify novel therapeutic targets to improve OvCa patient outcomes. Primary patient-derived qOvCa cells and proliferating cells were isolated using a single-cell microfluidics culture device and collected for single-cell RNA-seq. scRNA-seq of qOvCa cells identified (i) downregulation of MBD3 and CHD4, which are components of the Nucleosome Remodeling and Deacetylase (NuRD) complex, and (ii) upregulation of proteasome-associated genes. Knockdown of either MBD3 or CHD4 by shRNA, or NuRD complex pharmacologic inhibition with the HDAC inhibitors such as Vorinostat resulted in significant cell growth arrest without cell death. Standard and Fucci reporter-based cell cycle analysis further confirmed that inhibition of the NuRD complex with Vorinostat induced 94.47% cells in the G0 phase (p<0.0001), suggesting a dense quiescent state. Through cell cycle phase maps produced by iterative immunofluorescence of 30 core cell cycle regulators and manifold learning, we found Vorinostat-treated OvCa cells demonstrated a completely different cell cycle structure from control cells, with most of the cells in an extreme G0 phase. Bulk RNA-seq of Vorinostat-treated cells in three OvCa cell lines validated the downregulation of pathways relating to cell cycle, cell division, and DNA replication (LFC<-1, p<0.05), which is consistent with stem cells. Upregulation of several pathways involved in proteostasis were also noted. We therefore performed a targeted drug screen for combinatorial therapy approaches to eradicate qOvCa. We found that Vorinostat combined with the proteasome inhibitor Carfilzomib demonstrated the most profound synergistic cell death (Loewe index synergy score 23-73). Increased proteasome activity was also found in both primary and Vorinostat-induced qOvCa, suggesting the essential role of the proteasome in qOvCa. Tumor xenograft studies confirmed that Vorinostat alone can delay tumor growth (p<0.05) and combinatorial therapy of Vorinostat and Carfilzomib is more efficacious (p=0.0049). Taken together, NuRD complex inhibition induces quiescence. Combination therapy with Vorinostat to induce quiescence combined with proteasome inhibitors resulted in the profound death of therapy-resistant quiescent cells. Our work suggests this is a novel therapeutic approach to eradicate chemoresistant qOvCa cells and increase cure rates. Citation Format: Qi Jiang, Michelle Ertel, Santiago Panesso- Gómez, Sara Sannino, April Sagan, Alexander J. Cole, Stacy C. McGonigal, Betsy Ann Varghese, Wayne Stallaert, Jeffrey L. Brodsky, Hatice U. Osmanbeyoglu, Ronald J. Buckanovich. A new combinatorial therapy that synergistically targets the NuRD complex and proteostasis to eradicate quiescent ovarian cancer cells [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2024; Part 1 (Regular Abstracts); 2024 Apr 5-10; San Diego, CA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2024;84(6_Suppl):Abstract nr 5906.
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