- Tan, Xiaochao;
- Banerjee, Priyam;
- Pham, Edward A;
- Rutaganira, Florentine UN;
- Basu, Kaustabh;
- Bota-Rabassedas, Neus;
- Guo, Hou-Fu;
- Grzeskowiak, Caitlin L;
- Liu, Xin;
- Yu, Jiang;
- Shi, Lei;
- Peng, David H;
- Rodriguez, B Leticia;
- Zhang, Jiaqi;
- Zheng, Veronica;
- Duose, Dzifa Y;
- Solis, Luisa M;
- Mino, Barbara;
- Raso, Maria Gabriela;
- Behrens, Carmen;
- Wistuba, Ignacio I;
- Scott, Kenneth L;
- Smith, Mark;
- Nguyen, Khanh;
- Lam, Grace;
- Choong, Ingrid;
- Mazumdar, Abhijit;
- Hill, Jamal L;
- Gibbons, Don L;
- Brown, Powel H;
- Russell, William K;
- Shokat, Kevan;
- Creighton, Chad J;
- Glenn, Jeffrey S;
- Kurie, Jonathan M
Heightened secretion of protumorigenic effector proteins is a feature of malignant cells. Yet, the molecular underpinnings and therapeutic implications of this feature remain unclear. Here, we identify a chromosome 1q region that is frequently amplified in diverse cancer types and encodes multiple regulators of secretory vesicle biogenesis and trafficking, including the Golgi-dedicated enzyme phosphatidylinositol (PI)-4-kinase IIIβ (PI4KIIIβ). Molecular, biochemical, and cell biological studies show that PI4KIIIβ-derived PI-4-phosphate (PI4P) synthesis enhances secretion and accelerates lung adenocarcinoma progression by activating Golgi phosphoprotein 3 (GOLPH3)-dependent vesicular release from the Golgi. PI4KIIIβ-dependent secreted factors maintain 1q-amplified cancer cell survival and influence prometastatic processes in the tumor microenvironment. Disruption of this functional circuitry in 1q-amplified cancer cells with selective PI4KIIIβ antagonists induces apoptosis and suppresses tumor growth and metastasis. These results support a model in which chromosome 1q amplifications create a dependency on PI4KIIIβ-dependent secretion for cancer cell survival and tumor progression.