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  2. Multiomics Profiling Establishes the Polypharmacology of FDA-Approved CDK4/6 Inhibitors and the Potential for Differential Clinical Activity

Multiomics Profiling Establishes the Polypharmacology of FDA-Approved CDK4/6 Inhibitors and the Potential for Differential Clinical Activity

  • Cell Chem Biol. 2019 Aug 15;26(8):1067-1080.e8. doi: 10.1016/j.chembiol.2019.05.005.
Marc Hafner 1 Caitlin E Mills 1 Kartik Subramanian 1 Chen Chen 1 Mirra Chung 1 Sarah A Boswell 1 Robert A Everley 1 Changchang Liu 1 Charlotte S Walmsley 2 Dejan Juric 3 Peter K Sorger 4
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Laboratory of Systems Pharmacology, Department of Systems Biology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
  • 2 Termeer Center for Targeted Therapies, Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center, Boston, MA 02114, USA.
  • 3 Laboratory of Systems Pharmacology, Department of Systems Biology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA; Termeer Center for Targeted Therapies, Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center, Boston, MA 02114, USA. Electronic address: [email protected].
  • 4 Laboratory of Systems Pharmacology, Department of Systems Biology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA. Electronic address: [email protected].
Abstract

The target profiles of many drugs are established early in their development and are not systematically revisited at the time of FDA approval. Thus, it is often unclear whether therapeutics with the same nominal targets but different chemical structures are functionally equivalent. In this paper we use five different phenotypic and biochemical assays to compare approved inhibitors of cyclin-dependent kinases 4/6-collectively regarded as breakthroughs in the treatment of hormone receptor-positive breast Cancer. We find that transcriptional, proteomic, and phenotypic changes induced by palbociclib, ribociclib, and abemaciclib differ significantly; abemaciclib in particular has advantageous activities partially overlapping those of alvocidib, an older polyselective CDK Inhibitor. In cells and mice, abemaciclib inhibits kinases other than CDK4/6 including CDK2/cyclin A/E-implicated in resistance to CDK4/6 inhibition-and CDK1/cyclin B. The multifaceted experimental and computational approaches described here therefore uncover underappreciated differences in CDK4/6 inhibitor activities with potential importance in treating human patients.

Keywords

CDK4/6 inhibitors; abemaciclib; breast cancer; cancer therapeutics; drug mechanisms of action; drug profiling; kinase inhibitors; palbociclib; ribociclib.

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