Sensitizing tumor response to topoisomerase I antibody drug conjugate by selective CDK7 inhibition

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

This study investigates the transcriptional impact of Q901, a highly selective CDK7 inhibitor in clinical development. Q901 primarily disrupted MYC and E2F-dependent transcription program, downregulating cell cycle control and DNA damage repair pathways. CDK7 binding at the promoter-proximal regions was dramatically stabilized by Q901, leading to reduced occupancy of MYC, E2F, and RNA Polymerase II (RNAPII). These findings offered a novel therapeutic strategy to enhance cancer susceptibility to TOP1-DNA protein crosslinks (TOP1-DPCs) induced by TOP1 inhibitors. Resistance to TOP1 inhibitors arises through activation of DNA repair pathway when elongating RNAPII encounters TOP1-DPCs. By suppressing RNAPII transition from initiation to elongation and DNA repair pathways, Q901 stabilizes TOP1-DPCs and sensitizes tumor to TOP1 inhibitors. Preclinical studies demonstrated enhanced tumor suppression when combining Q901 with TOP1 inhibitor-based antibody-drug conjugates (TOP1i-ADCs), highlighting its potential as a therapeutic option for cancers resistant to TOP1i-ADC therapy.

Teaser

Overcoming ADC cross-resistance through combination approach.

Article activity feed