Pro-survival roles for p21(Cip1/Waf1) in non-small cell lung cancer

Menée à l'aide de lignées cellulaires modifiées génétiquement, de données portant sur des patients atteints d'un cancer du poumon non à petites cellules et d'une technique d'imagerie monocellulaire quantitative à grande vitesse, cette étude examine le rôle de la protéine p21 durant la prolifération cellulaire et après la chimiothérapie

British Journal of Cancer, sous presse, 2024, article en libre accès

Résumé en anglais

Background : Quiescence is reversible proliferative arrest. Multiple mechanisms regulate quiescence that are not fully understood. High expression of the CDK inhibitor p21Cip1/Waf1 correlates with a poor prognosis in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and, in non-transformed cells, p21 promotes quiescence after replication stress. We tested whether NSCLC cells enter p21-dependent quiescence and if this is advantageous to NSCLC cells.

Methods : Through analysis of patient data and quantitative, single-cell, timelapse imaging of genetically-engineered NSCLC reporter cell lines we investigated the role of p21 in NSCLC during normal proliferation and after chemotherapy.

Results : High p21 expression correlates with a poor prognosis in TP53 wild-type, but not TP53 mutant, NSCLC patients and TP53 wild-type NSCLC cells can enter p21-dependent quiescence, downstream of replication stress. Without p21, unrepaired DNA damage propagates into S-phase and cells display increased genomic instability. p21 expression confers survival advantages to TP53 wild-type NSCLC cells, during proliferation and after chemotherapy. p21 can promote tumour relapse by allowing recovery from both G1 and G2 arrests after chemotherapy.

Conclusions : p21-dependent quiescence exists in TP53 wild-type NSCLC cells and provides survival advantages to these cells. Targeting p21 function in TP53 wild-type tumours could lead to better outcomes for chemotherapy treatment in NSCLC patients.