Synergistic and additive effect of retinoic acid in circumventing resistance to P53 restoration

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Abstract

TP53 mutations occur in ∼50% of all human tumors, with increased frequency in aggressive cancers that are notoriously difficult to treat. Additionally, p53 missense mutations are remarkably predictive of refractoriness to chemo/radiotherapy in various malignancies. These observations have led to the development of mutant p53-targeting agents that restore p53 function. An important unknown is which p53-mutant tumors will respond to p53 reactivation-based therapies. Here, we found a heterogeneous impact on therapeutic response to p53 restoration, suggesting that it will unlikely be effective as a monotherapy. Through gene expression profiling of p53R172H-mutant lymphomas, we identified retinoic acid receptor gamma (RARγ) as an actionable target and demonstrated that pharmacological activation of RARγ with a synthetic retinoid sensitizes resistant p53-mutant lymphomas to p53 restoration, while additively improving outcome and survival in inherently sensitive tumors.

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Larsson, C. A., Moyer, S. M., Liu, B., Michel, K. A., Pant, V., Yang, P., … Lozano, G. (2018). Synergistic and additive effect of retinoic acid in circumventing resistance to P53 restoration. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 115(9), 2198–2203. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1719001115

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