Abstract

Abstract Lung cancer accounts for about 27% of the cancer related deaths in the USA annually. Pathologically, it is a very complex disease broadly classified into small cell lung cancer (SCLC) and non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). NSCLCs are further classified into squamous cell carcinoma, large cell carcinoma and adenocarcinoma. Achaete-scute homolog 1 (ASCL1), an important transcription factor essential in the development of neuroendocrine cells (NE) in lungs is shown to be specifically expressed in lung NE cancers and 10-20% of adenocarcinomas (AD) with NE differentiation (NED), thus suggesting a role in the pathogenesis of these tumors. Our previous study showed that ASCL1 is a regulator of the RET oncogene in AD with NED. RET is a receptor tyrosine kinase with two isoforms in humans: RET9 (short) and RET51 (long). We performed survival analysis to study implications of RET isoforms in ASCL1+ tumors and found that elevated expression of the long RET mRNA was associated with poor survival. Subsequent in vitro experiments demonstrated that treatment with EGF robustly induced phosphorylation of RET in HCC1833 and H1755 cell lines which have high endogenous levels of ASCL1 and RET but not in VMRC-LCD cell line which has high level of ASCL1 but low level of RET. EGF induced phosphorylation of RET was diminished by gefitinib and by EGFR siRNA. Immunoprecipitation results indicated direct binding between EGFR and RET in presence of EGF. Furthermore, a high throughput drug screening found 8 EGFR inhibitors that were 10 - 250 fold more cytotoxic in ASCL1+ compared with ASCL1- AD cells. These results implicate EGFR as a key regulator of RET activation in ASCL1+ AD and suggest that EGFR inhibitors may be therapeutic for this population of patients. Citation Format: Kaustubh N. Bhinge, Yang Lin, Hamed Rahi, Marie Christine Aubry, Aaron Mansfield, Irina Kovtun, Stephen Murphy, Ping Yang, Dennis Wigle, Joanne (Eunhee) Yi, Aqsa Nasir, Simone Terra, Julian Molina, George Vasmatzis, Farhad Kosari. EGFR-mediated activation of RET in ASCL1+ lung adenocarcinoma. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 107th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2016 Apr 16-20; New Orleans, LA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2016;76(14 Suppl):Abstract nr 1129.

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