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Tumor Heterogeneity Underlies Differential Cisplatin Sensitivity in Mouse Models of Small-Cell Lung Cancer.

Franziska Böttger ,
Ekaterina A Semenova ,
Ji-Ying Song ,
Giustina Ferone ,
Jan van der Vliet ,
Miranda Cozijnsen ,
Rajith Bhaskaran ,
Lorenzo Bombardelli ,
Sander R Piersma ,
Thang V Pham ,
Connie R Jimenez ,
Anton Berns

Abstract

Small-cell lung cancer is the most aggressive type of lung cancer, characterized by a remarkable response to chemotherapy followed by development of resistance. Here, we describe SCLC subtypes in Mycl- and Nfib-driven GEMM that include CDH1-high peripheral primary tumor lesions and CDH1-negative, aggressive intrapulmonary metastases. Cisplatin treatment preferentially eliminates the latter, thus revealing a striking differential response. Using a combined transcriptomic and proteomic approach, we find a marked reduction in proliferation and metabolic rewiring following cisplatin treatment and present evidence for a distinctive metabolic and structural profile defining intrinsically resistant populations. This offers perspectives for effective combination therapies that might also hold promise for treating human SCLC, given the very similar response of both mouse and human SCLC to cisplatin.

More about this publication

Cell reports

Volume 27
Issue nr. 11
Pages 3345-3358.e4
Publication date 11-06-2019

Full text links

Publisher website (DOI) 10.1016/j.celrep.2019.05.057
Europe PubMed Central 31189116
Pubmed 31189116

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