Effect of CCS1477 treatment on gene expression in NRF2-activated lung cancer cells
Ontology highlight
ABSTRACT: Constitutive activation of NRF2 provides a selective advantage to malignant tumour clones through the hijacking of the NRF2-dependent cytoprotective transcriptional program, which allows the cancer cells to survive and thrive in the chemically stressful tumour niche, whilst also providing resistance to anti-cancer drugs due to the upregulation of xenobiotic metabolizing enzymes and drug efflux pumps. Through a small-molecule epigenetic screen carried out in KEAP1 mutant lung cancer cells, in this study, we identified CCS1477 (Inobrodib) to be an inhibitor of the global NRF2-dependent transcription program. Mechanistically, CCS1477 is able to repress NRF2’s cytoprotective response through the inhibition of its obligate transcriptional activator partner CBP/ p300. Importantly, in addition to repressing NRF2-dependent anti-oxidative stress and xenobiotic metabolizing enzyme gene expression, CCS1477 treatment is also able to reverse the chemoresistance phenotype and re-sensitize NRF2-activated tumour cells to anti-cancer drugs. Furthermore, in co-culture experiments of KEAP1 mutant cancer cells with primary human T cells, CCS1477 treatment suppressed the acquisition of the T cell exhaustion transcriptional state, which should function to augment the anti-cancer immune response. Thus, CCS1477-mediated inhibition of CBP/ p300 represents a novel therapeutic strategy with which to target the currently untreatable tumours with aberrant NRF2 activation.
ORGANISM(S): Homo sapiens
PROVIDER: GSE292969 | GEO | 2025/03/31
REPOSITORIES: GEO
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