Literature DB >> 18089817

Proapoptotic BH3-only BCL-2 family protein BIM connects death signaling from epidermal growth factor receptor inhibition to the mitochondrion.

Jing Deng1, Takeshi Shimamura, Samanthi Perera, Nicole E Carlson, Dongpo Cai, Geoffrey I Shapiro, Kwok-Kin Wong, Anthony Letai.   

Abstract

A subset of lung cancers expresses mutant forms of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) that are constitutively activated. Cancers bearing activated EGFR can be effectively targeted with EGFR inhibitors such as erlotinib. However, the death-signaling pathways engaged after EGFR inhibition are poorly understood. Here, we show that death after inhibition of EGFR uses the mitochondrial, or intrinsic, pathway of cell death controlled by the BCL-2 family of proteins. BCL-2 inhibits cell death induced by erlotinib, but BCL-2-protected cells are thus rendered BCL-2-dependent and sensitive to the BCL-2 antagonist ABT-737. BH3 profiling reveals that mitochondrial BCL-2 is primed by death signals after EGFR inhibition in these cells. As this result implies, key death-signaling proteins of the BCL-2 family, including BIM, were found to be up-regulated after erlotinib treatment and intercepted by overexpressed BCL-2. BIM is induced by lung cancer cell lines that are sensitive to erlotinib but not by those resistant. Reduction of BIM by siRNA induces resistance to erlotinib. We show that EGFR activity is inhibited by erlotinib in H1650, a lung cancer cell line that bears a sensitizing EGFR mutation, but that H1650 is not killed. We identify the block in apoptosis in this cell line, and show that a novel form of erlotinib resistance is present, a block in BIM up-regulation downstream of EGFR inhibition. This finding has clear implications for overcoming resistance to erlotinib. Resistance to EGFR inhibition can be modulated by alterations in the intrinsic apoptotic pathway controlled by the BCL-2 family of proteins.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 18089817     DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-07-1961

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer Res        ISSN: 0008-5472            Impact factor:   12.701


  80 in total

1.  BIM expression in treatment-naive cancers predicts responsiveness to kinase inhibitors.

Authors:  Anthony C Faber; Ryan B Corcoran; Hiromichi Ebi; Lecia V Sequist; Belinda A Waltman; Euiheon Chung; Joao Incio; Subba R Digumarthy; Sarah F Pollack; Youngchul Song; Alona Muzikansky; Eugene Lifshits; Sylvie Roberge; Erik J Coffman; Cyril H Benes; Henry L Gómez; José Baselga; Carlos L Arteaga; Miguel N Rivera; Dora Dias-Santagata; Rakesh K Jain; Jeffrey A Engelman
Journal:  Cancer Discov       Date:  2011-07-22       Impact factor: 39.397

2.  Drug-induced death signaling strategy rapidly predicts cancer response to chemotherapy.

Authors:  Joan Montero; Kristopher A Sarosiek; Joseph D DeAngelo; Ophélia Maertens; Jeremy Ryan; Dalia Ercan; Huiying Piao; Neil S Horowitz; Ross S Berkowitz; Ursula Matulonis; Pasi A Jänne; Philip C Amrein; Karen Cichowski; Ronny Drapkin; Anthony Letai
Journal:  Cell       Date:  2015-02-26       Impact factor: 41.582

3.  ErbB2 requires integrin alpha5 for anoikis resistance via Src regulation of receptor activity in human mammary epithelial cells.

Authors:  Keneshia K Haenssen; Sarah A Caldwell; Kristina S Shahriari; S Raelle Jackson; Kelly A Whelan; Andres J Klein-Szanto; Mauricio J Reginato
Journal:  J Cell Sci       Date:  2010-03-23       Impact factor: 5.285

Review 4.  Mitochondria: gatekeepers of response to chemotherapy.

Authors:  Kristopher A Sarosiek; Triona Ni Chonghaile; Anthony Letai
Journal:  Trends Cell Biol       Date:  2013-09-21       Impact factor: 20.808

Review 5.  Mechanisms of tumor resistance to EGFR-targeted therapies.

Authors:  Elizabeth A Hopper-Borge; Rochelle E Nasto; Vladimir Ratushny; Louis M Weiner; Erica A Golemis; Igor Astsaturov
Journal:  Expert Opin Ther Targets       Date:  2009-03       Impact factor: 6.902

Review 6.  Nexus of signaling and endocytosis in oncogenesis driven by non-small cell lung cancer-associated epidermal growth factor receptor mutants.

Authors:  Byung Min Chung; Eric Tom; Neha Zutshi; Timothy Alan Bielecki; Vimla Band; Hamid Band
Journal:  World J Clin Oncol       Date:  2014-12-10

Review 7.  Targeting the PI3K signaling pathway in cancer.

Authors:  Kwok-Kin Wong; Jeffrey A Engelman; Lewis C Cantley
Journal:  Curr Opin Genet Dev       Date:  2009-12-16       Impact factor: 5.578

8.  PUMA and BIM are required for oncogene inactivation-induced apoptosis.

Authors:  Gregory R Bean; Yogesh Tengarai Ganesan; Yiyu Dong; Shugaku Takeda; Han Liu; Po M Chan; Yafen Huang; Lewis A Chodosh; Gerard P Zambetti; James J-D Hsieh; Emily H-Y Cheng
Journal:  Sci Signal       Date:  2013-03-26       Impact factor: 8.192

9.  Intratumoral Heterogeneity in EGFR-Mutant NSCLC Results in Divergent Resistance Mechanisms in Response to EGFR Tyrosine Kinase Inhibition.

Authors:  Margaret Soucheray; Marzia Capelletti; Inés Pulido; Yanan Kuang; Cloud P Paweletz; Jeffrey H Becker; Eiki Kikuchi; Chunxiao Xu; Tarun B Patel; Fatima Al-Shahrour; Julián Carretero; Kwok-Kin Wong; Pasi A Jänne; Geoffrey I Shapiro; Takeshi Shimamura
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2015-08-17       Impact factor: 12.701

10.  Alteration of the mitochondrial apoptotic pathway is key to acquired paclitaxel resistance and can be reversed by ABT-737.

Authors:  Ozgur Kutuk; Anthony Letai
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2008-10-01       Impact factor: 12.701

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