Repurposed floxacins targeting RSK4 prevent chemoresistance and metastasis in lung and bladder cancer
Author
Chrysostomou, SteliosRoy, Rajat
Prischi, Filippo
Thamlikitkul, Lucksamon
Chapman, Kathryn L
Mufti, Uwais
Peach, Robert
Ding, Laifeng
Hancock, David
Moore, Christopher
Molina-Arcas, Miriam
Mauri, Francesco
Pinato, David J
Abrahams, Joel M
Ottaviani, Silvia
Castellano, Leandro
Giamas, Georgios
Pascoe, Jennifer
Moonamale, Devmini
Pirrie, Sarah
Gaunt, Claire
Billingham, Lucinda
Steven, Neil M
Cullen, Michael
Hrouda, David
Winkler, Mathias
Post, John
Cohen, Philip
Salpeter, Seth J
Bar, Vered
Zundelevich, Adi
Golan, Shay
Leibovici, Dan
Lara, Romain
Klug, David R
Yaliraki, Sophia N
Barahona, Mauricio
Wang, Yulan
Downward, Julian
Skehel, J Mark
Ali, Maruf M U
Seckl, Michael J
Pardo, Olivier E
Affiliation
Imperial College London; University of Essex; Mahidol University; Assay Biology, Domainex Ltd; University Hospital Würzburg; Chinese Academy of Sciences; The Francis Crick Institute; University of Sussex; University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust; University of Birmingham; Charing Cross Hospital; University of Dundee; Curesponse; Rabin Medical Center; Kaplan Medical Center; Cambridge Science Park; Nanyang Technological University; MRC Laboratory of Molecular BiologyPublication date
2021-07-14
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Lung and bladder cancers are mostly incurable because of the early development of drug resistance and metastatic dissemination. Hence, improved therapies that tackle these two processes are urgently needed to improve clinical outcome. We have identified RSK4 as a promoter of drug resistance and metastasis in lung and bladder cancer cells. Silencing this kinase, through either RNA interference or CRISPR, sensitized tumor cells to chemotherapy and hindered metastasis in vitro and in vivo in a tail vein injection model. Drug screening revealed several floxacin antibiotics as potent RSK4 activation inhibitors, and trovafloxacin reproduced all effects of RSK4 silencing in vitro and in/ex vivo using lung cancer xenograft and genetically engineered mouse models and bladder tumor explants. Through x-ray structure determination and Markov transient and Deuterium exchange analyses, we identified the allosteric binding site and revealed how this compound blocks RSK4 kinase activation through binding to an allosteric site and mimicking a kinase autoinhibitory mechanism involving the RSK4's hydrophobic motif. Last, we show that patients undergoing chemotherapy and adhering to prophylactic levofloxacin in the large placebo-controlled randomized phase 3 SIGNIFICANT trial had significantly increased (P = 0.048) long-term overall survival times. Hence, we suggest that RSK4 inhibition may represent an effective therapeutic strategy for treating lung and bladder cancer.Citation
Chrysostomou S, Roy R, Prischi F, Thamlikitkul L, Chapman KL, Mufti U, Peach R, Ding L, Hancock D, Moore C, Molina-Arcas M, Mauri F, Pinato DJ, Abrahams JM, Ottaviani S, Castellano L, Giamas G, Pascoe J, Moonamale D, Pirrie S, Gaunt C, Billingham L, Steven NM, Cullen M, Hrouda D, Winkler M, Post J, Cohen P, Salpeter SJ, Bar V, Zundelevich A, Golan S, Leibovici D, Lara R, Klug DR, Yaliraki SN, Barahona M, Wang Y, Downward J, Skehel JM, Ali MMU, Seckl MJ, Pardo OE. Repurposed floxacins targeting RSK4 prevent chemoresistance and metastasis in lung and bladder cancer. Sci Transl Med. 2021 Jul 14;13(602):eaba4627. doi: 10.1126/scitranslmed.aba4627.Type
ArticleAdditional Links
https://www.science.org/journal/stmPMID
34261798Journal
Science Translational Medicineae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1126/scitranslmed.aba4627