Targeting C4-demethylating genes in the cholesterol pathway sensitizes cancer cells to EGF receptor inhibitors via increased EGF receptor degradation

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Abstract

Persistent signaling by the oncogenic EGF receptor (EGFR) is a major source of cancer resistance to EGFR targeting. We established that inactivation of 2 sterol biosynthesis pathway genes, SC4MOL (sterol C4-methyl oxidase-like) and its partner, NSDHL (NADP-dependent steroid dehydrogenase-like), sensitized tumor cells to EGFR inhibitors. Bioinfor-matics modeling of interactions for the sterol pathway genes in eukaryotes allowed us to hypothesize and then extensively validate an unexpected role for SC4MOL and NSDHL in controlling the signaling, vesicular traffi cking, and degradation of EGFR and its dimerization partners, ERBB2 and ERBB3. Meta-bolic block upstream of SC4MOL with ketoconazole or CYP51A1 siRNA rescued cancer cell viability and EGFR degradation. Inactivation of SC4MOL markedly sensitized A431 xenografts to cetuximab, a therapeutic anti-EGFR antibody. Analysis of Nsdhl -defi cient Bpa 1H/+ mice confi rmed dramatic and selective loss of internalized platelet-derived growth factor receptor in fi broblasts, and reduced acti-vation of EGFR and its effectors in regions of skin lacking NSDHL. © 2012 American Association for Cancer Research.

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Sukhanova, A., Gorin, A., Serebriiskii, I. G., Gabitova, L., Zheng, H., Restifo, D., … Astsaturov, I. (2013). Targeting C4-demethylating genes in the cholesterol pathway sensitizes cancer cells to EGF receptor inhibitors via increased EGF receptor degradation. Cancer Discovery, 3(1), 96–112. https://doi.org/10.1158/2159-8290.CD-12-0031

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