Neuroblastoma is treated with aggressive multimodal therapy, yet more than 50% of patients experience relapse. We recently showed that relapsed neuroblastomas frequently harbor mutations leading to ...hyperactivated ERK signaling and sensitivity to MEK inhibition therapy. Here we sought to define a synergistic therapeutic partner to potentiate MEK inhibition.
We first surveyed 22 genetically annotated human neuroblastoma-derived cell lines (from 20 unique patients) for sensitivity to the MEK inhibitor binimetinib. After noting an inverse correlation with sensitivity to ribociclib (CDK4/6 inhibitor), we studied the combinatorial effect of these two agents using proliferation assays, cell-cycle analysis, Ki67 immunostaining, time-lapse microscopy, and xenograft studies.
Sensitivity to binimetinib and ribociclib was inversely related (
= -0.58,
= 0.009).
amplification status and expression were associated with ribociclib sensitivity and binimetinib resistance, whereas increased MAPK signaling was the main determinant of binimetinib sensitivity and ribociclib resistance. Treatment with both compounds resulted in synergistic or additive cellular growth inhibition in all lines tested and significant inhibition of tumor growth in three of four xenograft models of neuroblastoma. The augmented growth inhibition was attributed to diminished cell-cycle progression that was reversible upon removal of drugs.
Here we demonstrate that combined binimetinib and ribociclib treatment shows therapeutic synergy across a broad panel of high-risk neuroblastoma preclinical models. These data support testing this combination therapy in relapsed high-risk neuroblastoma patients, with focus on cases with hyperactivated RAS-MAPK signaling.
.
Alterations in
occur in cancers, both in the treatment-naïve state and following targeted therapies, most notably BRAF and MEK inhibitors in
-V600E-mutant melanoma and colorectal cancer. Efforts were ...undertaken to understand the effects of these mutations, based upon protein structural location, and MEK1/2 activity. Two categories of MEK1/2 alterations were evaluated, those associated with either the allosteric pocket or helix-A. Clinically, MEK1/2 alterations of the allosteric pocket are rare and we demonstrate that they confer resistance to MEK inhibitors, while retaining sensitivity to BRAF inhibition. Most mutations described in patients fall within, or are associated with, helix-A. Mutations in this region reduce sensitivity to both BRAF and MEK inhibition and display elevated phospho-ERK1/2 levels, independent from increases in phospho-MEK1/2. Biochemical experiments with a representative helix-A variant,
-Q56P, reveal both increased catalytic efficiency of the activated enzyme, and phosphorylation-independent activity relative to wild-type MEK1. Consistent with these findings, MEK1/2 alterations in helix A retain sensitivity to downstream antagonism via pharmacologic inhibition of ERK1/2. This work highlights the importance of classifying mutations based on structural and phenotypic consequences, both in terms of pathway signaling output and response to pharmacologic inhibition.
This study suggests that alternate modes of target inhibition, such as ERK inhibition, will be required to effectively treat tumors harboring these MEK1/2-resistant alleles.
.
Treatment of cells with chemotherapy drugs activates the intrinsic mitochondrial pathway of apoptosis and the caspase protease cascade. Recently, the lysosomal protease cathepsin D has been ...implicated in apoptosis caused by oxidative stress, inhibition of protein kinase C, and stimulation of the TNFR1 and Fas death receptors. However, the role of cathepsin D in chemotherapy-induced cell death has remained largely unexplored. In this report, we show that treatment of U937 leukemia cells with the chemotherapy drug etoposide (VP-16) results in cathepsin D release into the cytosol within 4 hours after initiation of drug treatment. VP-16-induced cathepsin D release was not inhibited by z-VAD-FMK or pepstatin A, suggesting that it occurred independently of the activities of caspase proteases or cathepsin D. Down-regulation of cathepsin D expression in suspension U937 cells or adherent HeLa cells using cathepsin D small interfering RNA partially inhibited cell death resulting from treatment of cells with tumor necrosis factor-alpha, tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis inducing ligand, or the chemotherapy drugs VP-16, cisplatin, and 5-fluorouracil. Moreover, cathepsin D down-regulation significantly delayed cytochrome c release and caspase-3 activation in response to chemotherapy treatment. Incubation of isolated mitochondria with cathepsin D-treated cytosolic extracts resulted in potent release of cytochrome c, indicating that a cytoplasmic substrate mediates the effects of cathepsin D on mitochondria. Together, these findings show that cathepsin D plays an important role in chemotherapy-induced cell death, and that cathepsin D lies upstream of cytochrome c release and caspase-3 activation in the chemotherapy-induced execution pathway.
Genome-wide screening of genetic alterations between normal and cancer cells, as well as among subgroups of tumors, is important for establishing molecular mechanism and classification of cancer. ...Gene silencing through loss of heterozygosity is widely observed in cancer cells and detectable by analyzing allelic loss of single nucleotide polymorphism and/or short tandem repeat markers. To use minute quantities of DNA that are available through laser capture microdissection (LCM) of cancer cells, a whole genome amplification method that maintains locus and allele balance is essential. We have successfully used a ø29 polymerase-based isothermal whole genome amplification method to amplify LCM DNA using a proteinase K lysis procedure coupled with a pooling strategy. Through single nucleotide polymorphism and short tandem repeat genotype analysis we demonstrate that using pooled DNA from two or three separate amplification reactions significantly reduces any allele bias introduced during amplification. This strategy is especially effective when using small quantities of source DNA. Although a convenient alkaline lysis DNA extraction procedure provided satisfactory results from using 1500 to 3000 LCM cells, proteinase K digestion was superior for lower cell numbers. Accurate genotyping is achieved with as few as 100 cells when both proteinase K extraction and pooling are applied.
SHP2 inhibitors offer an appealing and novel approach to inhibit receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) signaling, which is the oncogenic driver in many tumors or is frequently feedback activated in response ...to targeted therapies including RTK inhibitors and MAPK inhibitors. We seek to evaluate the efficacy and synergistic mechanisms of combinations with a novel SHP2 inhibitor, TNO155, to inform their clinical development.
The combinations of TNO155 with EGFR inhibitors (EGFRi), BRAFi, KRAS
i, CDK4/6i, and anti-programmed cell death-1 (PD-1) antibody were tested in appropriate cancer models
and
, and their effects on downstream signaling were examined.
In EGFR-mutant lung cancer models, combination benefit of TNO155 and the EGFRi nazartinib was observed, coincident with sustained ERK inhibition. In BRAF
colorectal cancer models, TNO155 synergized with BRAF plus MEK inhibitors by blocking ERK feedback activation by different RTKs. In KRAS
cancer cells, TNO155 effectively blocked the feedback activation of wild-type KRAS or other RAS isoforms induced by KRAS
i and greatly enhanced efficacy. In addition, TNO155 and the CDK4/6 inhibitor ribociclib showed combination benefit in a large panel of lung and colorectal cancer patient-derived xenografts, including those with KRAS mutations. Finally, TNO155 effectively inhibited RAS activation by colony-stimulating factor 1 receptor, which is critical for the maturation of immunosuppressive tumor-associated macrophages, and showed combination activity with anti-PD-1 antibody.
Our findings suggest TNO155 is an effective agent for blocking both tumor-promoting and immune-suppressive RTK signaling in RTK- and MAPK-driven cancers and their tumor microenvironment. Our data provide the rationale for evaluating these combinations clinically.
Several endogenous or viral inhibitors of apoptosis, including Bcl-2, Bcl-xL, FLIP, p35, and CrmA, have been shown to be cleaved by caspases during apoptosis. In this study, we demonstrate that the ...endogenous inhibitor of apoptosis, hILP/XIAP, is also cleaved in apoptotic T lymphocytes, generating at least one prominent fragment of 29 kDa. This p29 cleaved fragment was detected in Jurkat cells induced to apoptose by anti-Fas antibody, staurosporin, or VP-16. The cleavage of hILP appears to be caspase mediated because the production of the p29 protein was inhibited by the pan-caspase peptide inhibitor, Z-VAD.FMK. In Jurkat cells engineered to overexpress CrmA, cleavage of hILP in response to anti-Fas antibody or staurosporin was inhibited, whereas overexpression of Bcl-2 abrogated the cleavage in response to VP-16. Cleavage of hILP was also observed in cell-free reactions using in vitro translated hILP and recombinant caspase-3 or -7. Moreover, we found that the p29 hILP fragment retained the ability to bind caspase-3 and -7, as shown previously for full-length or BIR-2 hILP. The p29 cleavage product was also detected during T-cell receptor-mediated apoptosis in peripheral blood lymphocytes from normal donors. Furthermore, tumor-associated T lymphocytes purified from ascites of patients with ovarian cancer expressed fragmented hILP, which was not detected in control T cells purified from peripheral blood of normal donors. Our results suggest that the cleavage of hILP represents an important event in apoptosis of T lymphocytes in both normal and pathological in vivo settings.
Targeting RAF for antitumor therapy in RAS-mutant tumors holds promise. Herein, we describe in detail novel properties of the type II RAF inhibitor, LXH254.
LXH254 was profiled in biochemical,
, and
...assays, including examining the activities of the drug in a large panel of cancer-derived cell lines and a comprehensive set of
models. In addition, activity of LXH254 was assessed in cells where different sets of RAF paralogs were ablated, or that expressed kinase-impaired and dimer-deficient variants of ARAF.
We describe an unexpected paralog selectivity of LXH254, which is able to potently inhibit BRAF and CRAF, but has less activity against ARAF. LXH254 was active in models harboring BRAF alterations, including atypical BRAF alterations coexpressed with mutant K/NRAS, and
mutants, but had only modest activity in
mutants. In RAS-mutant lines, loss of ARAF, but not BRAF or CRAF, sensitized cells to LXH254. ARAF-mediated resistance to LXH254 required both kinase function and dimerization. Higher concentrations of LXH254 were required to inhibit signaling in RAS-mutant cells expressing only ARAF relative to BRAF or CRAF. Moreover, specifically in cells expressing only ARAF, LXH254 caused paradoxical activation of MAPK signaling in a manner similar to dabrafenib. Finally,
, LXH254 drove complete regressions of isogenic variants of RAS-mutant cells lacking ARAF expression, while parental lines were only modestly sensitive.
LXH254 is a novel RAF inhibitor, which is able to inhibit dimerized BRAF and CRAF, as well as monomeric BRAF, while largely sparing ARAF.
During cellular apoptosis, retinoblastoma protein (RB) is subjected to cleavage near the carboxyl terminus by a caspase-3-like protease. In addition, an heretofore unidentified protease cleaves RB ...internally, generating fragments of 68 and 48 kDa. Internal cleavage abrogates the ability of RB to associate with E2F. To investigate the mechanism of RB internal cleavage, we developed and employed an in vitro cleavage assay. Incubation of in vitro translated (35)S-RB with apoptotic cell extracts led to RB cleavage at the C-terminus, followed by internal cleavage. The caspase peptide inhibitors z-VAD-FMK or z-DEVD-FMK blocked both cleavage events. Rapid C-terminal and internal cleavage were also observed when recombinant caspase-3 was added to (35)S-RB. Moreover, when caspase-3 was added to nonapoptotic cell extract, efficient internal cleavage of cellular RB was observed. Caspase-mediated internal cleavage occurred following RB residue aspartate(349) in the sequence DSID(349). This sequence is consistent with a DXXD recognition motif for caspase-3-like enzymes. Interestingly, we also observed RB internal cleavage in caspase-3-deficient MCF-7 cells, indicating that other caspases are capable of cleaving RB internally. Indeed, caspase-7, a member of the caspase-3 subfamily, was found to cleave (35)S-RB at both the carboxyl terminus, and following aspartate(349). By contrast, caspases that are not members of the caspase-3 subfamily failed to cleave RB. Taken together, our findings demonstrate that during apoptosis, a caspase-3-like protease is responsible for degradation and functional inactivation of RB by cleaving the protein internally following aspartate(349).
Inhibition of cyclin-dependent kinases 4 and 6 (CDK4/6) is associated with robust antitumor activity. Ribociclib (LEE011) is an orally bioavailable CDK4/6 inhibitor that is approved for the treatment ...of hormone receptor-positive, human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative advanced breast cancer, in combination with an aromatase inhibitor, and is currently being evaluated in several additional trials. Here, we report the preclinical profile of ribociclib. When tested across a large panel of kinase active site binding assays, ribociclib and palbociclib were highly selective for CDK4, while abemaciclib showed affinity to several other kinases. Both ribociclib and abemaciclib showed slightly higher potency in
-dependent cells than in
-dependent cells, while palbociclib did not show such a difference. Profiling CDK4/6 inhibitors in large-scale cancer cell line screens
confirmed that
loss of function is a negative predictor of sensitivity. We also found that routinely used cellular viability assays measuring adenosine triphosphate levels as a proxy for cell numbers underestimated the effects of CDK4/6 inhibition, which contrasts with assays that assess cell number more directly. Robust antitumor efficacy and combination benefit was detected when ribociclib was added to encorafenib, nazartinib, or endocrine therapies in patient-derived xenografts.
Anti-tumor efficacy of targeted therapies is variable across patients and cancer types. Even in patients with initial deep response, tumors are typically not eradicated and eventually relapse. To ...address these challenges, we present a systematic screen for targets that limit the anti-tumor efficacy of EGFR and ALK inhibitors in non-small cell lung cancer and BRAF/MEK inhibitors in colorectal cancer. Our approach includes genome-wide CRISPR screens with or without drugs targeting the oncogenic driver (“anchor therapy”), and large-scale pairwise combination screens of anchor therapies with 351 other drugs. Interestingly, targeting of a small number of genes, including MCL1, BCL2L1, and YAP1, sensitizes multiple cell lines to the respective anchor therapy. Data from drug combination screens with EGF816 and ceritinib indicate that dasatinib and agents disrupting microtubules act synergistically across many cell lines. Finally, we show that a higher-order-combination screen with 26 selected drugs in two resistant EGFR-mutant lung cancer cell lines identified active triplet combinations.
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•CRISPR screens can systematically identify oncology drug combination opportunities•Co-targeting of driver oncogenes and MCL1, BCL2L1, or YAP1 boosts drug responses•Microtubule disrupting agents broadly synergize with EGFR or ALK inhibitors•Rationally discovered triplet combinations can overcome cancer drug resistance
Response to cancer therapeutics is variable across patients and often suboptimal. Tiedt et al. use large-scale genetic and drug combination screens across many cancer models to systematically identify combination opportunities that enhance the response to EGFR and ALK inhibitors in lung cancer as well as BRAF/MEK inhibitors in colorectal cancer.