Quiescent OXPHOS-High Triple-Negative Breast Cancer Cells That Persist After Chemotherapy Depend on BCL-XL for Survival

  • Slawomir Andrzejewski
  • , Marie Winter
  • , Leandro Encarnacao Garcia
  • , Olusiji Akinrinmade
  • , Francisco Madeira Marques
  • , Emmanouil Zacharioudakis
  • , Anna Skwarska
  • , Julio Aguirre-Ghiso
  • , Marina Konopleva
  • , Guangrong Zheng
  • , Susan A. Fineberg
  • , Daohong Zhou
  • , Evripidis Gavathiotis
  • , Tao Wang
  • , Eugen Dhimolea

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

The persistent residual tumor cells that survive after chemotherapy are a major cause of treatment failure, but their survival mechanisms remain largely elusive. These cancer cells are typically characterized by a quiescent state with suppressed activity of MYC and MTOR. We observed that the MYC-suppressed persistent triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) cells are metabolically flexible and can upregulate mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) genes and respiratory function (“OXPHOS-high” cell state) in response to DNA-damaging anthracyclines such as doxorubicin, but not to taxanes. The elevated biomass and respiratory function of mitochondria in OXPHOS-high persistent cancer cells were associated with mitochondrial elongation and remodeling, suggestive of increased mitochondrial fusion. A genome-wide CRISPR editing screen in doxorubicin-persistent OXPHOS-high TNBC cells revealed the BCL-XL gene as the top survival dependency in these quiescent tumor cells, but not in their untreated proliferating counterparts. Quiescent OXPHOS-high TNBC cells were highly sensitive to BCL-XL inhibitors, but not to inhibitors of BCL2 and MCL1. Interestingly, inhibition of BCL-XL in doxorubicin-persistent OXPHOS-high TNBC cells rapidly abrogated mitochondrial elongation and respiratory function, followed by caspase 3/7 activation and cell death. The platelet-sparing proteolysis-targeted chimera (PROTAC) BCL-XL degrader DT2216 enhanced the efficacy of doxorubicin against TNBC xenografts in vivo without induction of thrombocytopenia that is often observed with the first-generation BCL-XL inhibitors, supporting the development of this combinatorial treatment strategy for eliminating dormant tumor cells that persist after treatment with anthracycline-based chemotherapy.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1557
JournalCells
Volume14
Issue number19
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 2025
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • BCL-XL
  • chemotherapy
  • oxidative phosphorylation
  • quiescence
  • triple-negative breast cancer

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