Investigator

Erik S. Knudsen

Chairperson/Associate Director of Basic Science · Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center, Molecular and Cellular Biology

ESKErik S. Knudsen
Papers(1)
Tumor Suppressors Con…
Collaborators(8)
Jianxin WangKaren McLeanMichelle RotiSidney MahanThomas N. O’ConnorVishnu KumarasamyAdam P. DommerAgnieszka K. Witkiewi…
Institutions(1)
Roswell Park Comprehe…

Papers

Tumor Suppressors Condition Differential Responses to the Selective CDK2 Inhibitor BLU-222

Abstract Cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (CDK2) inhibitors have recently been developed and have entered clinical trials. Combination approaches can help broaden the use of therapeutic agents and establish more effective treatments. Here, we evaluated the selective CDK2 inhibitor BLU-222 for mechanisms of response in the context of ovarian and breast cancer models. Sensors of cellular CDK activity indicated that sensitivity to either CDK4/6 or CDK2 inhibition was related to the differential dependence on a single CDK for G1–S transition. Unlike CDK4/6 inhibitors, BLU-222 was able to robustly inhibit proliferation through cell-cycle inhibition in both G1 and G2 phases. However, it remained possible for cells to reenter the cell cycle upon drug withdrawal. The antiproliferative strength and impact on G1–S versus G2–M accumulation was mediated by the RB tumor suppressor. To broaden the sensitivity to CDK2 inhibition, combinatorial drug screens were performed that identified both synergistic (e.g., CDK4/6 inhibitors) and antagonistic (e.g., WEE1 inhibitors) relationships. Models that were exceptionally sensitive to CDK2 inhibition displayed coordinate expression of cyclin E1 and P16INK4A, an endogenous CDK4/6 inhibitor. Functional studies demonstrated that P16INK4A and CDK4/6 activity were key mediators of sensitivity to BLU-222. Clinical gene and protein expression analyses revealed a positive correlation between cyclin E1 and P16INK4A and identified that ∼25% of ovarian cancers exhibited coordinate expression of cyclin E, P16INK4A, and RB, indicative of strong sensitivity to CDK2 inhibition. Together, this work advances a precision strategy for the use of CDK2 inhibitors in the context of ovarian and breast cancers. Significance: The CDK2-specific inhibitor BLU-222 shows preclinical efficacy in breast and ovarian cancer with select determinants of response and holds promise in combinatorial strategies. See related article by House and colleagues, p. 1297

99Works
1Papers
8Collaborators
Breast NeoplasmsCell Line, TumorTumor MicroenvironmentBiomarkers, TumorNeoplasmsDisease Models, Animal

Positions

2022–

Chairperson/Associate Director of Basic Science

Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center · Molecular and Cellular Biology

2018–

Chairperson

Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center · Molecular and Cellular Biology

2016–

Professor

University of Arizona · Department of Medicine

2016–

Associate Director for Basic Research

University of Arizona Cancer Center · Department of Medicine

2012–

Professor

The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center · McDermott Center

2007–

Professor

Thomas Jefferson University · Cancer Biology

2007–

Deputy Director

Kimmel Cancer Center · Basic Research

2007–

Professor

University of Cincinnati · Cell Biology

2005–

Scientific Director

University of Cincinnati · Cell Biology

2002–

Associate Professor

University of Cincinnati · Cell Biology

1998–

Assistant Professor

University of Cincinnati · Cell Biology

Education

1996

PhD

University of California · Biology

1990

BS

University of Washington · Chemistry/Biochemistry