AI Article Synopsis

  • Continuous cancer growth is fueled by self-renewing cancer cells, making it challenging to target their uncontrolled growth through typical pathways.
  • The compound Quisinostat can encourage the re-expression of histone H1.0, which suppresses self-renewal in cancer cells without harming normal stem cells.
  • Quisinostat also prevents the expansion of resistant cancer cells post-treatment and reduces the chance of disease relapse, suggesting that combining it with targeted therapies could improve patient outcomes.

Article Abstract

Continuous cancer growth is driven by subsets of self-renewing malignant cells. Targeting of uncontrolled self-renewal through inhibition of stem cell-related signaling pathways has proven challenging. Here, we show that cancer cells can be selectively deprived of self-renewal ability by interfering with their epigenetic state. Re-expression of histone H1.0, a tumor-suppressive factor that inhibits cancer cell self-renewal in many cancer types, can be broadly induced by the clinically well-tolerated compound Quisinostat. Through H1.0, Quisinostat inhibits cancer cell self-renewal and halts tumor maintenance without affecting normal stem cell function. Quisinostat also hinders expansion of cells surviving targeted therapy, independently of the cancer types and the resistance mechanism, and inhibits disease relapse in mouse models of lung cancer. Our results identify H1.0 as a major mediator of Quisinostat's antitumor effect and suggest that sequential administration of targeted therapy and Quisinostat may be a broadly applicable strategy to induce a prolonged response in patients.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7156485PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-15615-zDOI Listing

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