Anoikis resistance or evasion of cell death triggered by matrix detachment is a hallmark of cancer cell survival and metastasis. We show that repeated exposure to suspension stress followed by recovery under attached conditions leads to development of anoikis resistance. The acquisition of anoikis resistance is associated with enhanced invasion, chemoresistance, and immune evasion in vitro and distant metastasis in vivo. This acquired anoikis resistance is not genetic, persisting for a finite duration without detachment stress, but is sensitive to CDK8/19 Mediator kinase inhibition that can also reverse anoikis resistance. Transcriptomic analysis reveals that CDK8/19 kinase inhibition induces bidirectional transcriptional changes in both sensitive and resistant cells, disrupting the balanced reprogramming required for anoikis adaptation and resistance by reversing some resistance associated pathways and enhancing others. Both anoikis resistance and in vivo metastatic growth of ovarian cancers are sensitive to CDK8/19 inhibition, thereby providing a therapeutic opportunity to both prevent and suppress ovarian cancer metastasis.
Mehri Monavarian, Resha Rajkarnikar, Emily Faith Page, Asha Kumari, Liz Quintero Macias, Felipe Massicano, Nam Y. Lee, Sarthak Sahoo, Nadine Hempel, Mohit Kumar Jolly, Lara Ianov, Elizabeth Worthey, Abhyudai Singh, Igor B. Roninson, Eugenia V. Broude, Mengqian Chen, Karthikeyan Mythreye