癌症研究
癌症
后天抵抗
计算生物学
生物
化学
遗传学
作者
Carmine Fedele,Hao Ran,Brian Diskin,Wei Wei,Jayu Jen,Mitchell J. Geer,Kiyomi Y. Araki,Uğur Özerdem,Diane M. Simeone,George Miller,Benjamin G. Neel,Kwan Ho Tang
出处
期刊:Cancer Discovery
[American Association for Cancer Research]
日期:2018-07-25
卷期号:8 (10): 1237-1249
被引量:271
标识
DOI:10.1158/2159-8290.cd-18-0444
摘要
Adaptive resistance to MEK inhibitors (MEKi) typically occurs via induction of genes for different receptor tyrosine kinases (RTK) and/or their ligands, even in tumors of the same histotype, making combination strategies challenging. SHP2 (PTPN11) is required for RAS/ERK pathway activation by most RTKs and might provide a common resistance node. We found that combining the SHP2 inhibitor SHP099 with a MEKi inhibited the proliferation of multiple cancer cell lines in vitroPTPN11 knockdown/MEKi treatment had similar effects, whereas expressing SHP099 binding-defective PTPN11 mutants conferred resistance, demonstrating that SHP099 is on-target. SHP099/trametinib was highly efficacious in xenograft and/or genetically engineered models of KRAS-mutant pancreas, lung, and ovarian cancers and in wild-type RAS-expressing triple-negative breast cancer. SHP099 inhibited activation of KRAS mutants with residual GTPase activity, impeded SOS/RAS/MEK/ERK1/2 reactivation in response to MEKi, and blocked ERK1/2-dependent transcriptional programs. We conclude that SHP099/MEKi combinations could have therapeutic utility in multiple malignancies.Significance: MEK inhibitors show limited efficacy as single agents, in part because of the rapid development of adaptive resistance. We find that SHP2/MEK inhibitor combinations prevent adaptive resistance in multiple cancer models expressing mutant and wild-type KRAS. Cancer Discov; 8(10); 1237-49. ©2018 AACR.See related commentary by Torres-Ayuso and Brognard, p. 1210This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1195.
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