Preventing cancer by long-term partial Myc suppression
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Abstract
Myc +/− haploinsufficient mice and mice with deleted Myc enhancers express reduced levels of the pleiotropic transcription factor Myc. Such mice are viable, with relatively mild pathologies, but show delay in onset of certain cancers. However, many phenotypes arising from germline gene perturbation are indirect consequences of adaptive developmental compensation and so do not translate to equivalent phenotypes when applied to adults. To ascertain whether systemic Myc hypomorphism also conferred cancer protection when acutely imposed in adults, and what the side-effects of this might be, we constructed a genetically engineered mouse model in which Myc expression may be systemically and reversibly hypomorphed at will. Acute imposition of Myc hypomorphism in adult mice conferred potent protection against both KRas G12D -driven lung and pancreatic cancers yet elicited only mild haematopoietic side effects. These side effects were completely suppressed by imposing Myc hypomorphism metronomically – a regimen that nonetheless retained potent cancer prophylaxis. Our data identify a key bottleneck at the transition from pre-malignant hyperplasia to overt tumour that is peculiarly reliant on levels of Myc that are higher than those required for most adult physiology, offering a possible window of opportunity for Myc inhibition in cancer prophylaxis.
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