- Watt, April C;
- Cejas, Paloma;
- DeCristo, Molly J;
- Metzger-Filho, Otto;
- Lam, Enid YN;
- Qiu, Xintao;
- BrinJones, Haley;
- Kesten, Nikolas;
- Coulson, Rhiannon;
- Font-Tello, Alba;
- Lim, Klothilda;
- Vadhi, Raga;
- Daniels, Veerle W;
- Montero, Joan;
- Taing, Len;
- Meyer, Clifford A;
- Gilan, Omer;
- Bell, Charles C;
- Korthauer, Keegan D;
- Giambartolomei, Claudia;
- Pasaniuc, Bogdan;
- Seo, Ji-Heui;
- Freedman, Matthew L;
- Ma, Cynthia;
- Ellis, Matthew J;
- Krop, Ian;
- Winer, Eric;
- Letai, Anthony;
- Brown, Myles;
- Dawson, Mark A;
- Long, Henry W;
- Zhao, Jean J;
- Goel, Shom
Pharmacologic inhibitors of cyclin-dependent kinases 4 and 6 (CDK4/6) were designed to induce cancer cell cycle arrest. Recent studies have suggested that these agents also exert other effects, influencing cancer cell immunogenicity, apoptotic responses, and differentiation. Using cell-based and mouse models of breast cancer together with clinical specimens, we show that CDK4/6 inhibitors induce remodeling of cancer cell chromatin characterized by widespread enhancer activation, and that this explains many of these effects. The newly activated enhancers include classical super-enhancers that drive luminal differentiation and apoptotic evasion, as well as a set of enhancers overlying endogenous retroviral elements that is enriched for proximity to interferon-driven genes. Mechanistically, CDK4/6 inhibition increases the level of several Activator Protein-1 (AP-1) transcription factor proteins, which are in turn implicated in the activity of many of the new enhancers. Our findings offer insights into CDK4/6 pathway biology and should inform the future development of CDK4/6 inhibitors.