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    Drug-resilient cancer cell phenotype is acquired via polyploidization associated with early stress response coupled to HIF-2α transcriptional regulation

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    Therapeutic resistance and recurrence remain core challenges in cancer therapy. How therapy resistance arises is currently not fully understood with tumors surviving via multiple alternative routes. Here, we demonstrate that a subset of cancer cells survives therapeutic stress by entering a transient state characterized by whole genome doubling. At the onset of the polyploidization program, we identified an upregulation of key transcriptional regulators, including the early stress-response protein AP-1 and normoxic stabilization of HIF-2α. We found altered chromatin accessibility, ablated expression of RB1, and enrichment of AP-1 motif accessibility. We demonstrate that AP-1 and HIF-2α regulate a therapy resilient and survivor phenotype in cancer cells. Consistent with this, genetic or pharmacologic targeting of AP-1 and HIF-2α reduced the number of surviving cells following chemotherapy treatment. The role of AP-1 and HIF-2α in stress-response by polyploidy suggest a novel avenue for tackling chemotherapy-induced resistance in cancer
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