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BCL-XL directly modulates RAS signalling to favour cancer cell stemness

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2017

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Nature Publishing Group UK
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Carné Trécesson, S. d., F. Souazé, A. Basseville, A. Bernard, J. Pécot, J. Lopez, M. Bessou, et al. 2017. “BCL-XL directly modulates RAS signalling to favour cancer cell stemness.” Nature Communications 8 (1): 1123. doi:10.1038/s41467-017-01079-1. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-017-01079-1.

Abstract

In tumours, accumulation of chemoresistant cells that express high levels of anti-apoptotic proteins such as BCL-XL is thought to result from the counter selection of sensitive, low expresser clones during progression and/or initial treatment. We herein show that BCL-XL expression is selectively advantageous to cancer cell populations even in the absence of pro-apoptotic pressure. In transformed human mammary epithelial cells BCL-XL favours full activation of signalling downstream of constitutively active RAS with which it interacts in a BH4-dependent manner. Comparative proteomic analysis and functional assays indicate that this is critical for RAS-induced expression of stemness regulators and maintenance of a cancer initiating cell (CIC) phenotype. Resistant cancer cells thus arise from a positive selection driven by BCL-XL modulation of RAS-induced self-renewal, and during which apoptotic resistance is not necessarily the directly selected trait.

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