Abstract
Simple SummaryInhibition of MEK has been proposed as a means to address mutant RAS colorectal cancer (CRC). However, MEK inhibitor adaptive resistance has led to reduced clinical utility of this new drug. Our studies have suggested the potential for the addition of an SRC inhibitor to prevent the development of resistance to MEK inhibitors. Moreover, we have identified that gene expression signature scores for RAS pathway activation, and MEK inhibitor resistance may be useful biomarkers in determining CRC drug sensitivity to the novel combination of Trametinib and Dasatinib.Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the second leading cause of cancer death in the United States. The RAS pathway is activated in more than 55% of CRC and has been targeted for therapeutic intervention with MEK inhibitors. Unfortunately, many patients have de novo resistance, or can develop resistance to this new class of drugs. We have hypothesized that much of this resistance may pass through SRC as a common signal transduction node, and that inhibition of SRC may suppress MEK inhibition resistance mechanisms. CRC tumors of the Consensus Molecular Subtype (CMS) 4, enriched in stem cells, are difficult to successfully treat and have been suggested to evade traditional chemotherapy agents through resistance mechanisms. Here, we evaluate targeting two pathways simultaneously to produce an effective treatment by overcoming resistance. We show that combining Trametinib (MEKi) with Dasatinib (SRCi) provides enhanced cell death in 8 of the 16 tested CRC cell lines compared to treatment with either agent alone. To be able to select sensitive cells, we simultaneously evaluated a validated 18-gene RAS pathway activation signature score along with a 13-gene MEKi resistance signature score, which we hypothesize predict tumor sensitivity to this dual targeted therapy. We found the cell lines that were sensitive to the dual treatment were predominantly CMS4 and had both a high 18-gene and a high 13-gene score, suggesting these cell lines had potential for de novo MEKi sensitivity but were subject to the rapid development of MEKi resistance. The 13-gene score is highly correlated to a score for SRC activation, suggesting resistance is dependent on SRC. Our data show that gene expression signature scores for RAS pathway activation and for MEKi resistance may be useful in determining which CRC tumors will respond to the novel drug combination of MEKi and SRCi.
Highlights
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is one of the leading causes of cancer deaths in the United States, it can be surgically cured with early detection
We demonstrate that pathway signature scores for the 18-gene RAS pathway signature and the 13-gene bypass MEK inhibitors (MEKi) resistance signature score serve as biomarkers for colorectal cancer (CRC) cells, especially the CMS4 class, that are sensitive to the therapeutic combination of MEKi and SRC activity with Dasatinib (SRCi)
The amount of MEK and SRC activation was determined using phospho-tyrosine/serine Western Blot analysis. This comparison was performed to determine if the canonical increase in SRC activity for CMS4 cell lines is reflected in their levels of phosphorylated SRC tyrosine 416 [30]
Summary
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is one of the leading causes of cancer deaths in the United States, it can be surgically cured with early detection. Many CRC tumors are not diagnosed until later stages when cure rates are low (15% five-year survival) [1]. The Wnt pathway is altered in over 80% of CRC most frequently because of mutations in APC [2]. Activated KRAS, BRAF or NRAS, which drive the oncogenic RAS/RAF/MEK/ERK pathway, are present in 55% of CRC tumors and portend poor survival [3–6]. The PI3K/AKT pathway is activated in more than 20–40% of CRC [7]. Effective inhibitors of EGFR, BRAF, MEK, AKT and ERK have not proven clinically efficacious, most likely due to drug resistance, and the inability to identify de novo drug sensitive tumors [8–12]
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