- Topham, Caroline;
- Tighe, Anthony;
- Ly, Peter;
- Bennett, Ailsa;
- Sloss, Olivia;
- Nelson, Louisa;
- Ridgway, Rachel A;
- Huels, David;
- Littler, Samantha;
- Schandl, Claudia;
- Sun, Ying;
- Bechi, Beatrice;
- Procter, David J;
- Sansom, Owen J;
- Cleveland, Don W;
- Taylor, Stephen S
Taxol and other antimitotic agents are frontline chemotherapy agents but the mechanisms responsible for patient benefit remain unclear. Following a genome-wide siRNA screen, we identified the oncogenic transcription factor Myc as a taxol sensitizer. Using time-lapse imaging to correlate mitotic behavior with cell fate, we show that Myc sensitizes cells to mitotic blockers and agents that accelerate mitotic progression. Myc achieves this by upregulating a cluster of redundant pro-apoptotic BH3-only proteins and suppressing pro-survival Bcl-xL. Gene expression analysis of breast cancers indicates that taxane responses correlate positively with Myc and negatively with Bcl-xL. Accordingly, pharmacological inhibition of Bcl-xL restores apoptosis in Myc-deficient cells. These results open up opportunities for biomarkers and combination therapies that could enhance traditional and second-generation antimitotic agents.