Investigator

Sara Sannino

Senior Scientist · Pfizer, Discovery Sciences, CGPS group

SSSara Sannino
Papers(1)
Identification of the…
Collaborators(10)
Alexander J. ColeAlex RobertsAlyssa WieldAmanda M. ClarkAmjad HijaziAustin ArrigoDaniel D. BrownDavid GauHui JiangJeffrey L. Brodsky
Institutions(3)
University Of Pittsbu…University of Pittsbu…University of Michigan

Papers

Identification of the MRTFA/SRF pathway as a critical regulator of quiescence and chemotherapy resistance in cancer

Chemoresistance is a major cause of cancer deaths. One understudied mechanism of chemoresistance is quiescence. We used single-cell culture to identify and isolate patient-derived proliferating and quiescent ovarian cancer cells (qOvCa). RNA-seq analysis indicated that hundreds of genes that are differentially expressed in qOvCa cells are transcriptional targets of the Myocardin-Related Transcription Factor-A/Serum Response Factor (MRTFA/SRF) pathway, and both genetic disruption and pharmacologic inhibition of MRTFA/SRF interaction (with the inhibitor CCG257081) induced quiescence across multiple cancer types. MRTFA/SRF inhibition-mediated quiescence is p27/Kip1 dependent and associated with a downregulation of cell cycle regulators, NCL, MYH9, and alterations in the proteasome. We show that the MRTFA/SRF axis plays a dual role in chemotherapy resistance, with both pathway inhibition and activation contributing to chemotherapy resistance in vitro and in patient samples. CCG081 treatment results in a proteasome-dependent downregulation of the stem-cell marker CD133. Suggesting a critical role for the proteasome in quiescent cells, CCG081 therapy sensitized OvCa cells to proteasome inhibitors. In vivo, we found that CCG257081 therapy could be used to induce tumor growth-arrest and delay disease growth to improve overall survival. Moreover, we found that dual therapy with CCG081 and proteasome inhibition further improved outcomes, leading to undetectable tumors in ∼20% of mice. Together, these data suggest that the MRTFA/SRF pathway is a critical regulator of quiescence in cancer and a potential therapeutic target.

27Works
1Papers
14Collaborators

Positions

2023–

Senior Scientist

Pfizer · Discovery Sciences, CGPS group

2021–

Research Assistant Professor

University of Pittsburgh · Department of Biological Sciences

2016–

Post Doctoral Associate

University of Pittsburgh · biological sciences

2015–

Postdoctoral Fellow

Ospedale San Raffaele · genetic and cell biology

2011–

PhD student

Ospedale San Raffaele · genetic and cell biology

2011–

preDoc student

Ospedale San Raffaele · genetic and cell biology

Education

2014

Ph.D.

Università degli Studi di Milano · Biosciences

Keywords
Protein foldingcancer biologyprotein-protein interactionprotein regulationcell biologycellular metabolismprotein quality controlredox homeostasisprotein degradationgene expression