AI Article Synopsis

  • - Small cell lung cancer (SCLC) has poor clinical outcomes due to the lack of effective long-term treatments, with the transcriptional factor FOXM1 playing a key role in cell proliferation and tumor progression.
  • - Research indicates that FOXM1 is significantly upregulated in SCLC, correlating with pathways linked to cancer growth and DNA damage repair, and its depletion enhances sensitivity to chemotherapy.
  • - High levels of FOXM1 expression in SCLC patients are associated with advanced disease, worse overall survival rates, and shorter progression-free survival after standard treatment, suggesting FOXM1 could serve as a valuable prognostic biomarker and therapeutic target.

Article Abstract

Small cell lung cancer (SCLC) continues to cause poor clinical outcomes due to limited advances in sustained treatments for rapid cancer cell proliferation and progression. The transcriptional factor Forkhead Box M1 (FOXM1) regulates cell proliferation, tumor initiation, and progression in multiple cancer types. However, its biological function and clinical significance in SCLC remain unestablished. Analysis of the Cancer Cell Line Encyclopedia and SCLC datasets in the present study disclosed significant upregulation of FOXM1 mRNA in SCLC cell lines and tissues. Gene set enrichment analysis (GSEA) revealed that FOXM1 is positively correlated with pathways regulating cell proliferation and DNA damage repair, as evident from sensitization of FOXM1-depleted SCLC cells to chemotherapy. Furthermore, Foxm1 knockout inhibited SCLC formation in the Rb1Trp53Myc (RPM) mouse model associated with increased levels of neuroendocrine markers, Ascl1 and Cgrp, and decrease in Yap1. Consistently, FOXM1 depletion in NCI-H1688 SCLC cells reduced migration and enhanced apoptosis and sensitivity to cisplatin and etoposide. SCLC with high FOXM1 expression (N = 30, 57.7%) was significantly correlated with advanced clinical stage, extrathoracic metastases, and decrease in overall survival (OS), compared with the low-FOXM1 group (7.90 vs. 12.46 months). Moreover, the high-FOXM1 group showed shorter progression-free survival after standard chemotherapy, compared with the low-FOXM1 group (3.90 vs. 8.69 months). Our collective findings support the utility of FOXM1 as a prognostic biomarker and potential molecular target for SCLC.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41388-021-01895-2DOI Listing

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