| Literature DB >> 22034911 |
Sen Zhang, Frank Wang, Jeffrey Keats, Xiaotian Zhu, Yaoyu Ning, Scott D Wardwell, Lauren Moran, Qurish K Mohemmad, Rana Anjum, Yihan Wang, Narayana I Narasimhan, David Dalgarno, William C Shakespeare, Juan J Miret, Tim Clackson, Victor M Rivera.
Abstract
Activating gene rearrangements of anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) have been identified as driver mutations in non-small-cell lung cancer, inflammatory myofibroblastic tumors, and other cancers. Crizotinib, a dual MET/ALK inhibitor, has demonstrated promising clinical activity in patients with non-small-cell lung cancer and inflammatory myofibroblastic tumors harboring ALK translocations. Inhibitors of driver kinases often elicit kinase domain mutations that confer resistance, and such mutations have been successfully predicted using in vitro mutagenesis screens. Here, this approach was used to discover an extensive set of ALK mutations that can confer resistance to crizotinib. Mutations at 16 residues were identified, structurally clustered into five regions around the kinase active site, which conferred varying degrees of resistance. The screen successfully predicted the L1196M, C1156Y, and F1174L mutations, recently identified in crizotinib-resistant patients. In separate studies, we demonstrated that crizotinib has relatively modest potency in ALK-positive non-small-cell lung cancer cell lines. A more potent ALK inhibitor, TAE684, maintained substantial activity against mutations that conferred resistance to crizotinib. Our study identifies multiple novel mutations in ALK that may confer clinical resistance to crizotinib, suggests that crizotinib's narrow selectivity window may underlie its susceptibility to such resistance and demonstrates that a more potent ALK inhibitor may be effective at overcoming resistance.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 22034911 PMCID: PMC3265718 DOI: 10.1111/j.1747-0285.2011.01239.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Biol Drug Des ISSN: 1747-0277 Impact factor: 2.817
Figure 1Crizotinib inhibits signaling and proliferation in EML4-ALK-dependent NSCLC cell lines. (A) immunoblot analysis of p-ALK and downstream signaling in H3122 cells treated with crizotinib. (B) In vivo efficacy of crizotinib in an H3122 subcutaneous xenograft model. Mean tumor volume ±SEM is plotted.
Inhibitory activity of crizotinib and TAE684 on ALK-positive and ALK-negative NSCLC lines
| Crizotinib | TAE684 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cell line | ALK status | Cell growth (GI50, n | p-ALK (IC50, n | Cell growth (GI50, n | p-ALK (IC50, n |
| H3122 | EML4-ALK v1 | 62 ± 18 | 43 ± 37 | 1.5 ± 0.6 | 1.0 |
| H2228 | EML4-ALK v3a/3b | 121 ± 61 | 55 ± 4 | 3.8 ± 2 | 3.7 |
| H838 | ALK negative | 1307 ± 270 | ND | 406 ± 217 | ND |
| H23 | ALK negative | 1773 ± 743 | ND | 618 ± 283 | ND |
ND, not determined.
Inhibitory activity of crizotinib and TAE684 on Ba/F3 cells expressing EML4-ALK mutants
| Crizotinib | TAE684 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Viability (IC50s, n | p-ALK (IC50, n | Viability (IC50, n | p-ALK (IC50, n | ||
| Ba/F3 line | ENU clone | Reintroduced | ENU clone | ENU clone | ENU clone |
| Parental | 1176 ± 282 | N/A | N/A | 1283 ± 348 | N/A |
| Native EML4-ALK | 132 ± 45 | N/A | 102 ± 70 | 8 ± 1 | 5 ± 3.5 |
| T1151K | 231 ± 106 | 152 ± 48 | ND | ND | ND |
| L1152V | 237 ± 25 | 162 ± 89 | ND | ND | ND |
| C1156Y | 489 ± 48 | ND | 408 ± 67 | 37 ± 5 | 11 ± 6 |
| I1171T | 393 ± 134 | 413 ± 62 | ND | ND | ND |
| F1174C | 479 ± 40 | 319 ± 90 | 165 ± 112 | 40 ± 2 | 6.7 ± 2.5 |
| L1196M | 981 ± 113 | 1215 ± 708 | 1162 ± 209 | 20 ± 3 | 3.3 ± 0.5 |
| S1206R | 681 ± 176 | 728 ± 362 | 356 ± 173 | 80 ± 9 | 16 ± 11 |
| E1210K | 318 ± 143 | 297 ± 92 | ND | ND | ND |
| F1245C | 425 ± 100 | 269 ± 194 | ND | ND | ND |
| G1269S | 953 ± 213 | 1196 ± 649 | 1366 ± 52 | 33 ± 9 | 35 ± 1 |
ENU clone: Ba/F3 cells obtained from the crizotinib mutagenesis screen.
Grown in the presence of 10 ng/mL IL-3.
ND, not determined; N/A, not applicable; ALK, anaplastic lymphoma kinase.
Figure 2Spectrum of EML4-ALK mutations recovered in a mutagenesis screen. (A) resistant clones recovered from ENU-treated Ba/F3 cells expressing native EML4-ALK cultured with indicated concentrations of crizotinib. Each bar represents the relative percentage of the indicated EML4-ALK kinase domain mutant among recovered clones. The percentage of wells surveyed that contained outgrowth is indicated. (B) position of mutations in a model of crizotinib (shown in yellow) bound to the ALK kinase domain. (C) immunoblot analysis of p-ALK and downstream signaling in Ba/F3 cells carrying native and mutant variants of EML4-ALK.
Figure 3Crizotinib is not efficacious in mouse Ba/F3 xenograft models expressing EML4-ALK mutants. (A) In vivo efficacy of crizotinib in EML4-ALK-driven Ba/F3 models. Mean tumor volume ±SEM was plotted. (B) PK/PD analysis after treating tumor-bearing mice with a single dose of vehicle (V, for 6 h) or 200 mg/kg crizotinib.