Abstract

Abstract Colorectal cancer (CRC) is a heterogeneous disease with a wide spectrum of clinical outcomes, from indolent resectable disease to aggressive-metastatic cases. Primary and acquired resistance limits the efficacy of available treatments, and the identification of effective drug combinations is needed to further improve patients' outcomes. We previously found that the NEDD8-activating enzyme inhibitor pevonedistat induces tumor stabilization in preclinical models of poorly differentiated, clinically aggressive CRC resistant to available therapies. To identify drugs that can be effectively combined with pevonedistat, we performed a drop-out loss-of-function synthetic lethality screening with a shRNA library covering 200 drug-target genes in four different CRC cell lines. Multiple screening hits were found to be involved in the EGFR signaling pathway, suggesting that, rather than inhibition of a specific gene, interference with the EGFR pathway at various levels could be effectively leveraged for combination therapies based on pevonedistat. Exploiting both BRAF-mutant and RAS/RAF wild-type CRC models, we validated the therapeutic relevance of our findings by showing that combined blockade of NEDD8 and EGFR pathways led to increased growth arrest and apoptosis both in vitro and in vivo. Pathway modulation analysis showed that compensatory feedback loops induced by single treatments were blunted by the combinations. Our results suggested possible therapeutic opportunities in specific CRC clinical settings. We further focused on HER2-amplified CRC and found marked sensitivity to pevonedistat in a CRC cell line carrying HER2 amplification. In these cells, long-term in vitro treatment with a combination of lapatinib and trastuzumab induces the emergence of colonies of long-term persisters (i.e., cells surviving to several weeks of HER2/EGFR blockade). These persisters display extremely slow growth and senescence features, however they fully recover upon removal of the blockade, mimicking disease relapse in patients after treatment suspension. Interestingly, persister colonies maintained sensitivity to pevonedistat, displaying a marked decrease when pevonedistat was added after six weeks of HER2/EGFR blockade, independently of the continuation of the blockade. These results unveil the possibility of employing pevonedistat in HER2-amplified CRC patients subsequently to tumor stabilization or regression by HER-2/EGFR blockade. Citation Format: Federica Invrea, Alessandro Carugo, Consalvo Petti, Giulio Draetta, Enzo Medico. The NEDD8 pathway as a therapeutic target in HER2-amplified colorectal cancer [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the AACR Special Conference on Colorectal Cancer; 2022 Oct 1-4; Portland, OR. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2022;82(23 Suppl_1):Abstract nr B022.

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