p16 expression confers sensitivity to CDK2 inhibitors
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Blocking the cell cycle is a promising avenue for cancer therapy, with Cyclin-Dependent Kinase 2 (CDK2) emerging as a key target. However, in multiple cell types, CDK4/6 activity compensates for CDK2 inhibition and sustains the proliferative program, enabling CDK2 reactivation. Thus, we hypothesized that sensitivity to CDK2 inhibition is linked to the absence of this CDK4/6-mediated compensatory mechanism. Here we show that Cyclin E1-driven ovarian cancers often co-express the tumor suppressor p16, which inhibits CDK4/6. We show that ovarian cancer cells expressing p16 exhibit heightened sensitivity to CDK2 inhibitors and that depletion of p16 renders them significantly more resistant. Multiplexed immunofluorescence of 225 ovarian patient tumors reveals that at least 18% of tumors express high Cyclin E1 and high p16, a group that we expect to be particularly sensitive to CDK2 inhibition. Thus, p16 may be a useful biomarker for identifying the patients most likely to benefit from CDK2 inhibitors.