Abstract

BackgroundPI3K/AKT/mTOR and RAS/RAF/MEK/ERK pathways are thought to be the central transducers of oncogenic signals in solid malignancies, and there has been a lot of enthusiasm for developing inhibitors of these pathways for cancer therapy. Some preclinical models have suggested that combining inhibitors of both parallel pathways may be more efficacious, but it remains unknown whether dual inhibition with high enough concentrations of the drugs to achieve meaningful target inhibition is tolerable in a clinical setting. Furthermore, the predictive factors for dual inhibition are unknown.MethodsNon-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cell lines (n=12) with the most frequent oncogenic backgrounds (K-Ras mut n=3, EGFR mut n=3, ALK translocated n=3, and triple-negative n=3) were exposed to PI3K inhibitors (ZSTK474, PI-103) or MEK inhibitor (CI-1040) alone or in combination and analysed with an MTS growth/cytotoxicity assay and statistically by combination index analysis. The activity of the intracellular signaling pathways in response to the inhibitor treatments was analysed with a western blot using phospho-specific antibodies to AKT, ERK1/2, S6, and 4E-BPI. For the differential dosing schedule experiments, additional breast and colon cancer cell lines known to be sensitive to dual inhibition were included.ResultsTwo of the 12 NSCLC cell lines tested, H3122 (ALK translocated) and H1437 (triple-negative), showed increased cytotoxicity upon dual MEK and PI3K inhibition. Furthermore, MDA-MB231 (breast) and HCT116 (colon), showed increased cytotoxicity upon dual inhibition, as in previous studies. Activation of parallel pathways in the dual inhibition-sensitive lines was also noted in response to single inhibitor treatment. Otherwise, no significant differences in downstream intracellular pathway activity (S6 and 4E-BPI) were noted between PI3K alone and dual inhibition other than the increased cytotoxicity of the latter. In the alternative dosing schedules two out of the four dual inhibition-sensitive cell lines showed similar cytotoxicity to continuous PI3K and short (15min) MEK inhibition treatment.ConclusionsTherapy with a dual PI3K and MEK inhibitor combination is more efficient than either inhibitor alone in some NSCLC cell lines. Responses to dual inhibition were not associated with any specific oncogenic genotype and no other predictive factors for dual inhibition were noted. The maximal effect of the dual PI3K and MEK inhibition can be achieved with alternative dosing schedules which are potentially more tolerable clinically.

Highlights

  • PI3K/AKT/mTOR and RAS/RAF/MEK/ERK pathways are thought to be the central transducers of oncogenic signals in solid malignancies, and there has been a lot of enthusiasm for developing inhibitors of these pathways for cancer therapy

  • We first addressed the effects of these inhibitors alone in the non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) lines A549 (K-Ras mutant), HCC827 (EGFR mutant) and H3122 (EML4-ALK translocated), representing the three most frequent oncogenic genotypes of the disease, to establish concentration frames for the target inhibition

  • In the Western blots ZSTK474 at a 3.3μM concentration induced complete downregulation of pAKT, an immediate downstream target of PI3K, while PI-103 induced a similar inhibition at concentrations of 1 to 3.3 μM (Figure 1A). pS6 downregulation correlated highly with pAKT downregulation (Figure 1A)

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Summary

Introduction

PI3K/AKT/mTOR and RAS/RAF/MEK/ERK pathways are thought to be the central transducers of oncogenic signals in solid malignancies, and there has been a lot of enthusiasm for developing inhibitors of these pathways for cancer therapy. The high frequency of cancer-associated genetic alterations causing constitutive activation of PI3K-AKT and RAF-MEK-ERK and the addiction of cancer cells to their signals have led to enthusiasm for developing inhibitors of these pathways. The effectiveness of single pathway inhibition could be suppressed by de novo dependence on multiple signaling pathways or feedback activation of other signaling pathways in response to the inhibition of a single pathway [2,5] This has led to studies combining PI3K or AKT and MEK inhibitors. Clinical studies have shown the simultaneous inhibition of multiple pathways to be in all probability more toxic than inhibition of a single pathway, and no optimal dose has been established

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