AI Article Synopsis

  • - The research focuses on oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC), highlighting the need for better treatments, especially for advanced cases, and identifies CDK4/6 inhibitors like palbociclib as promising options due to their effects on cell cycle abnormalities.
  • - Palbociclib showed effectiveness in 80% of tested OSCC cell lines and in tumor growth control in mice; however, some resistant cells exhibited specific mutations that reduced palbociclib's efficacy.
  • - The study suggests that combining palbociclib with a PI3K/mTOR inhibitor could enhance treatment effectiveness, supporting further clinical testing of these combination therapies for OSCC.

Article Abstract

Objective: Lack of effective therapies remains a problem in the treatment of oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC), especially in patients with advanced tumors. OSCC development is driven by multiple aberrancies within the cell cycle pathway, including amplification of cyclin D1 and loss of p16. Hence, cell cycle inhibitors of the CDK4/6-cyclin D axis are appealing targets for OSCC treatment. Here, we determined the potency of palbociclib and identified genetic features that are associated with the response of palbociclib in OSCC.

Methods: The effect of palbociclib was evaluated in a panel of well-characterized OSCC cell lines by cell proliferation assays and further confirmed by evaluation in xenograft models. -mutant isogenic cell lines were used to investigate the effect of mutation towards palbociclib response.

Results: We demonstrated that 80% of OSCC cell lines are sensitive to palbociclib at sub-micromolar concentrations. Consistently, palbociclib was effective in controlling tumor growth in mice. We identified that palbociclib-resistant cells harbored mutations in . Using isogenic cell lines, we showed that mutant cells are less responsive to palbociclib as compared to wild-type cells with concurrent upregulation of CDK2 and cyclin E1 protein levels. We further demonstrated that the combination of a PI3K/mTOR inhibitor (PF-04691502) and palbociclib completely controlled tumor growth in mice.

Conclusions: This study demonstrated the potency of palbociclib in OSCC models and provides a rationale for the inclusion of testing in the clinical evaluation of CDK4/6 inhibitors and suggests combination approaches for further clinical studies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6713638PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.20892/j.issn.2095-3941.2018.0257DOI Listing

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