| Literature DB >> 19726788 |
Robert L Yauch1, Gerrit J P Dijkgraaf, Bruno Alicke, Thomas Januario, Christina P Ahn, Thomas Holcomb, Kanan Pujara, Jeremy Stinson, Christopher A Callahan, Tracy Tang, J Fernando Bazan, Zhengyan Kan, Somasekar Seshagiri, Christine L Hann, Stephen E Gould, Jennifer A Low, Charles M Rudin, Frederic J de Sauvage.
Abstract
The Hedgehog (Hh) signaling pathway is inappropriately activated in certain human cancers, including medulloblastoma, an aggressive brain tumor. GDC-0449, a drug that inhibits Hh signaling by targeting the serpentine receptor Smoothened (SMO), has produced promising anti-tumor responses in early clinical studies of cancers driven by mutations in this pathway. To evaluate the mechanism of resistance in a medulloblastoma patient who had relapsed after an initial response to GDC-0449, we determined the mutational status of Hh signaling genes in the tumor after disease progression. We identified an amino acid substitution at a conserved aspartic acid residue of SMO that had no effect on Hh signaling but disrupted the ability of GDC-0449 to bind SMO and suppress this pathway. A mutation altering the same amino acid also arose in a GDC-0449-resistant mouse model of medulloblastoma. These findings show that acquired mutations in a serpentine receptor with features of a G protein-coupled receptor can serve as a mechanism of drug resistance in human cancer.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19726788 PMCID: PMC5310713 DOI: 10.1126/science.1179386
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728