Abstract

BackgroundGastric cancer is the second leading cause of cancer mortality in the world. The receptor tyrosine kinase MET is constitutively activated in many gastric cancers and its expression is strictly required for survival of some gastric cancer cells. Thus, MET is considered a good candidate for targeted therapeutic intervention in this type of tumor, and MET inhibitors recently entered clinical trials. One of the major problems of therapies targeting tyrosine kinases is that many tumors are not responsive to treatment or eventually develop resistance to the drugs. Perspective studies are thus mandatory to identify the molecular mechanisms that could cause resistance to these therapies.ResultsOur in vitro and in vivo results demonstrate that, in MET-addicted gastric cancer cells, the activation of HER (Human Epidermal Receptor) family members induces resistance to MET silencing or inhibition by PHA-665752 (a selective kinase inhibitor). We provide molecular evidences highlighting the role of EGFR, HER3, and downstream signaling pathways common to MET and HER family in resistance to MET inhibitors. Moreover, we show that an in vitro generated gastric cancer cell line resistant to MET-inhibition displays overexpression of HER family members, whose activation contributes to maintenance of resistance.ConclusionsOur findings predict that gastric cancer tumors bearing constitutive activation of HER family members are poorly responsive to MET inhibition, even if this receptor is constitutively active. Moreover, the appearance of these alterations might also be responsible for the onset of resistance in initially responsive tumors.

Highlights

  • Gastric cancer is the second leading cause of cancer mortality in the world

  • Among them is the receptor for Hepatocyte Growth Factor (HGF), encoded by the MET gene, that promotes a complex biological program called "invasive growth", inducing cells to break intercellular junctions, acquire a motile/invasive phenotype and escape apoptosis [5]

  • In our work we show that in gastric cancer cell lines "addicted" to MET, activation of HER family members, through ligand stimulation or mutational activation, contributes to overcome MET inhibition

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Summary

Introduction

The receptor tyrosine kinase MET is constitutively activated in many gastric cancers and its expression is strictly required for survival of some gastric cancer cells. Gastric cancer is the second leading cause of mortality in the world and the first one in Asia. The identification of molecules altered in gastric cancers has led to the possibility of hitting them by use of specific targeted drugs. Recent studies demonstrated that MET plays a role in a high percentage of human tumors [7]. In gastric cancers this receptor is frequently constitutively activated; activation is usually associated with receptor overexpression, that can be due to gene amplification. MET activation can result from infection of gastric cells by Helicobacter Pylori, a known predisposing factor for development of gastric cancer

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