LKB1 regulates JNK-dependent stress signaling and apoptotic dependency of KRAS-mutant lung cancers

LKB1调控JNK依赖性应激信号传导和KRAS突变型肺癌的凋亡依赖性

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作者:Chendi Li ,Mohammed Usman Syed ,Anahita Nimbalkar ,Yi Shen ,Melissa D Vieira ,Cameron Fraser ,Zintis Inde ,Xingping Qin ,Jian Ouyang ,Johannes Kreuzer ,Sarah E Clark ,Grace Kelley ,Emily M Hensley ,Robert Morris ,Raul Lazaro ,Brian Belmonte ,Audris Oh ,Makeba Walcott ,Christopher S Nabel ,Sean Caenepeel ,Anne Y Saiki ,Karen Rex ,J Russell Lipford ,Rebecca S Heist ,Jessica J Lin ,Wilhelm Haas ,Kristopher Sarosiek ,Paul E Hughes ,Aaron N Hata
The efficacy of molecularly targeted therapies may be limited by co-occurring mutations within a tumor. Conversely, these alterations may confer collateral vulnerabilities that can be therapeutically leveraged. KRAS-mutant lung cancers are distinguished by recurrent loss of the tumor suppressor STK11/LKB1. Whether LKB1 modulates cellular responses to therapeutic stress seems unknown. Here we show that in LKB1-deficient KRAS-mutant lung cancer cells, inhibition of KRAS or its downstream effector MEK leads to hyperactivation of JNK due to loss of NUAK-mediated PP1B phosphatase activity. JNK-mediated inhibitory phosphorylation of BCL-XL rewires apoptotic dependencies, rendering LKB1-deficient cells vulnerable to MCL-1 inhibition. These results uncover an unknown role for LKB1 in regulating stress signaling and mitochondrial apoptosis independent of its tumor suppressor activity mediated by AMPK and SIK. Additionally, our study reveals a therapy-induced vulnerability in LKB1-deficient KRAS-mutant lung cancers that could be exploited as a genotype-informed strategy to improve the efficacy of KRAS-targeted therapies.

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