Primary Cilia Mediate Diverse Kinase Inhibitor Resistance Mechanisms in Cancer.

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Date
2018-06-05Author
Jenks, AD
Vyse, S
Wong, JP
Kostaras, E
Keller, D
Burgoyne, T
Shoemark, A
Tsalikis, A
de la Roche, M
Michaelis, M
Cinatl, J
Huang, PH
Tanos, BE
Type
Journal Article
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Primary cilia are microtubule-based organelles that detect mechanical and chemical stimuli. Although cilia house a number of oncogenic molecules (including Smoothened, KRAS, EGFR, and PDGFR), their precise role in cancer remains unclear. We have interrogated the role of cilia in acquired and de novo resistance to a variety of kinase inhibitors, and found that, in several examples, resistant cells are distinctly characterized by an increase in the number and/or length of cilia with altered structural features. Changes in ciliation seem to be linked to differences in the molecular composition of cilia and result in enhanced Hedgehog pathway activation. Notably, manipulating cilia length via Kif7 knockdown is sufficient to confer drug resistance in drug-sensitive cells. Conversely, targeting of cilia length or integrity through genetic and pharmacological approaches overcomes kinase inhibitor resistance. Our work establishes a role for ciliogenesis and cilia length in promoting cancer drug resistance and has significant translational implications.
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Subject
Cell Line, Tumor
Cilia
Humans
Neoplasms
Protein Kinase Inhibitors
Signal Transduction
Up-Regulation
Organogenesis
Drug Resistance, Neoplasm
Models, Biological
Hedgehog Proteins
Research team
Protein Networks
Molecular and Systems Oncology
Language
eng
Date accepted
2018-05-03
License start date
2018-06
Citation
Cell reports, 2018, 23 (10), pp. 3042 - 3055
Publisher
CELL PRESS