Abstract

Bruton’s tyrosine kinase (BTK) is a non-receptor intracellular kinase playing a key role in the proliferation and survival of normal and malignant B-lymphocytes. Its targeting by Ibrutinib, the first specific inhibitor, represented a turning point for the therapy of certain types of B-cell leukemias/lymphomas and several more BTK inhibitors are today in the clinic or advanced clinical trials. BTK expression was successively found to occur also outside of the hematopoietic compartment. In fact, we identified p65BTK, a novel 65 kDa isoform lacking an N-term stretch of 86 amino acids (compared to the 77 kDa protein expressed in B cells) as highly expressed in colon cancer patients. We demonstrated that p65BTK is a powerful oncogene acting downstream of the RAS/MAPK pathway and necessary for RAS-mediated transformation. Notably, the kinase domain is conserved and therefore inhibited by the available BTK-targeting drugs (Ibrutinib, Spebrutinib, etc.) which we used to demonstrate that p65BTK is an actionable target in drug-resistant colorectal carcinomas. We found p65BTK expressed also in >50% non-small cell lung cancers (NSCLC) and demonstrated that it is an actionable target in KRAS-mutated/EGFR-wild type drug-resistant NSCLC models (for which no targeted therapy is available). We also reported a significant correlation between p65BTK expression and low-grade tumors and overall survival of patients with grade III gliomas and showed that its targeting induced a significant decrease in the viability of in glioma stem cells. Finally, in ovarian cancer patients, p65BTK expression levels correlate with early relapse and shorter progression-free survival, both indicators of resistance to therapy. Remarkably, Ibrutinib is more effective than standard of care (SOC) therapeutics in in vitro and ex vivo settings. On the whole, our preclinical data indicate that, depending on the tumor type, BTK inhibitors used alone can induce cytotoxicity (gliomas), be more effective than SOC chemotherapy (ovarian cancer) or can kill drug-resistant tumor cells when used in combination with SOC chemotherapy (colon cancer and NSCLC) or targeted therapy (NSCLC and ovarian cancer), thus suggesting that p65BTK may be an actionable target in different solid tumors. In addition, our data also give the proof-of-concept for starting clinical trials using BTK inhibitors, alone or in combination, to improve the therapeutic options for solid tumors treatment.

Highlights

  • Bruton’s tyrosine kinase (BTK) is a 77 kDa non-receptor kinase originally identified as being defective in the primary immunodeficiency X-Linked Agammaglobulinemia

  • To identify specific kinases whose loss is synthetic lethal with chemotherapy we performed a kinase-directed shRNA screen in colorectal cancer (CRC) cells resistant to 5-Fluorouracil (5-FU) due to the loss of p53 (Grassilli et al, 2013) and, among the strongest hits, we identified a novel BTK isoform, which we dubbed p65BTK from his apparent molecular weight (Grassilli et al, 2016). p65BTK protein was found to be abundantly expressed in CRC tissues and CRC cell lines

  • Given that we identified p65BTK in synthetic lethal lossof-function screen aimed at identifying actionable targets in drug-resistant cells, the role of the novel isoform was experimentally explored in in vitro, ex vivo and in vivo models of 5FU-resistant CRCs using both, functional genetic approaches and chemical approaches (BTK inhibitors)

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Summary

Introduction

Bruton’s tyrosine kinase (BTK) is a 77 kDa non-receptor kinase originally identified as being defective in the primary immunodeficiency X-Linked Agammaglobulinemia Given that we identified p65BTK in synthetic lethal lossof-function screen aimed at identifying actionable targets in drug-resistant cells, the role of the novel isoform was experimentally explored in in vitro (cell lines), ex vivo (patientderived organoids) and in vivo (tumor xenografts) models of 5FU-resistant CRCs using both, functional genetic approaches (shRNA/siRNA) and chemical approaches (BTK inhibitors).

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