| Literature DB >> 24955213 |
Rodney E Shackelford1, Moiz Vora1, Kim Mayhall2, James Cotelingam1.
Abstract
The anaplastic lymphoma tyrosine kinase (ALK) gene was first described as a driver mutation in anaplastic non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. Dysregulated ALK expression is now an identified driver mutation in nearly twenty different human malignancies, including 4-9% of non-small cell lung cancers (NSCLC). The tyrosine kinase inhibitor crizotinib is more effective than standard chemotherapeutic agents in treating ALK positive NSCLC, making molecular diagnostic testing for dysregulated ALK expression a necessary step in identifying optimal treatment modalities. Here we review ALKmediated signal transduction pathways and compare the molecular protocols used to identify dysregulated ALK expression in NSCLC. We also discuss the use of crizotinib and second generation ALK tyrosine kinase inhibitors in the treatment of ALK positive NSCLC, and the known mechanisms of crizotinib resistance in NSCLC.Entities:
Keywords: Anaplastic lymphoma kinase; crizotinib; non-small cell lung cancer; pulmonary adenocarcinoma
Year: 2014 PMID: 24955213 PMCID: PMC4063252 DOI: 10.18632/genesandcancer.3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes Cancer ISSN: 1947-6019
A list of the human malignancies known to express ALK dysregulated protein
| Tumor Type | ALK Alteration | ALK Mutation Frequency | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Anaplastic Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma (ALCL) | t(2;5) ALK-Nucleophosmin chromosomal translocation | 60-85% of ALCLs are ALK positive, rare fusions with TPM3, TPM4, TFG, ATIC, CLTC, MSN, MYH9, and ALO17 | [ |
| Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer | Chromosomal inversion/ translocation on 2p fusing EML4-ALK | 3-7% of NSCLC are ALK positive, 21 known EML4-ALK breakpoints variants exist, rare fusions exist with TGF, KLC1, and KIKF5B | [ |
| Basal Cell Carcinoma | ALK over-expression | 250-fold increased phospho-ALK expression in ~100% of BCCs | [ |
| Breast Cancer | EML4-ALK fusion | 2.4% fusion positive by exon array profiling, 80% of inflammatory breast cancers show increased ALK protein | [ |
| Neuroblastoma | ALK over-expression | ALK over-expressed in over 50% of tumors, ~12.4% of tumors carry activating ALK point mutations which are also common in familial neuroblastoma | [ |
| Colorectal Carcinoma | EML4-ALK fusion | 2.4% fusion positive by exon array profiling | [ |
| Inflammatory Myofibroblastic Tumor (IMT) | Several ALK fusion proteins | ~50% of IMTs are ALK positive, fusion partners include CLTC, TPM3, TPM4, CLTC, CARS, ATIC, RANBP2, and SEC31L1. Activating ALK point mutations are also occur. | [ |
| Diffuse large B-Cell Lymphoma | Several ALK fusion proteins | Rare, with ~50 cases described. The most common fusions partners are CLTC and NPM. | [ |
| Glioblastoma | ALK over-expression | ALK is over-expressed, lowering ALK expression decreased glioblastoma tumor growth | [ |
| Renal Carcinomas | Several translocations | ALK translocations with EML4, TPM3, and VCL fusion partners, the translocations appear to occur at a low frequency | [ |
| Esophageal Squamous Cell Carcinoma | TPM4–ALK fusion | TPM4–ALK fusion oncoprotein type 2 found in ~20% of cases | [ |
| Ewing's Sarcoma | ALK over-expression | Moderate to high ALK positivity was found in the majority of tumors | [ |
| Ovarian Cancer | ALK over-expression | ALK over-expressed in 2-4% of ovarian cancers, one stromal sarcoma carried a FN1-ALK fusion protein | [ |
| Anaplastic Thyroid Carcinoma | ALK activating point mutations | L1198F and G1201E amino acid changes result in constitutive ALK kinase activation | [ |
| Melanoma | ALK over-expression | 6.9% of acral melanomas were ALK positive, ALK breakpoints suggest that translocations are present | [ |
| Rhabdomyosarcoma | ALK over-expression | 45% alveolar rhabdomyosarcomas examined were ALK positive. High ALK mRNA expression is a negative prognostic marker | [ |
| Retinoblastoma | Increased ALK mRNA | 2/2 retinoblastoma cell lines over-expressed ALK kinase domain mRNA | [ |
| Extramedullary plasmacytoma | ALK over-expression | 1 case in 46 extramedullary plasmacytomas was ALK positive by immunohistochemistry and FISH analysis | [ |
A list of the ALK translocation found in NSCLC and some of the more common EML4-ALK fusion protein characteristics (modified from references 50,70,98,99)
| ALK Fusion Variant | EML-ALK Translocation Nomenclature | Fusion Protein Characteristics (cell growth inhibition studies were done in Ba/F3 cells expressing each EML4-ALK variant) | Frequency in NSCLC |
|---|---|---|---|
| E13;A20 | E13; A20 (variant 1), E13;ins69 A20 | Cytoplasmic location, longer protein t1/2, cell growth inhibition at moderate ALK inhibitor concentrations | 33% |
| E6a/b;A20 | E6a/b;A20 (variants 3a/b) | Cytoplasmic and nuclear locations, longer protein t1/2, cell growth inhibition requires lower or moderate ALK inhibitor concentrations (v3a and 3b, respectively) | 29% |
| E20;A20 | E20; A20 (variant 2), E20;ins18A20 | Cytoplasmic location, shorter protein t1/2, cell growth inhibition at higher ALK inhibitor concentrations | 9% |
| E14;A20 | E14;ins11del49A20 (variant 4'), E14;del12A20 (variant 7) | No data | 3% |
| E18;A20 | E18; A20 (variant 5') | No data | 2% |
| E15;A20 | E15 del19;del20A20 (variant 4) | No data | 2% |
| E2;A20 | E2; A20 &E2;ins117A20 (variant 5a/b) | No data | 2% |
| E2;A20 | E17;ins68A20 | No data | 1% |
| E6;A19 | Not defined | No data | One example |
| KLC1–ALK | - | No data | Rare |
| PTPN3–ALK | - | No data | Rare |
| STRN–ALK | - | No data | Rare |
Different mechanisms of crizotinib resistance
“pm” denotes a point mutation.
| Mechanism of Crizotinib Resistance | Comment(s) | References |
|---|---|---|
| G1269A EML-ALKpm | Gly→Ala reduces crizotinib binding ATP-binding pocket by steric hindrance | [ |
| L1196M EML-ALKpm | Gatekeeper residue mutation blocks crizotinib binding | [ |
| C1156Y EML-ALKpm | Alters ALK crizotinib binding cavity, reducing crizotinib-protein interactions | [ |
| S1206Y EML-ALKpm | Lowers crizotinib-protein affinity by eliminating two H-bonds between crizotinib and the ALK binding site | [ |
| L1152R EML-ALKpm | Mutation resistant to crizotinib and the structurally unrelated compound TAE684 | [ |
| G1202R EML-ALKpm | A mutation-specific strong H-bond pulls crizotinib out of the position found in the non-crizotinib resistant EML-ALK fusion gene | [ |
| 1151Tins | Thr insertion is predicted to alter ATP binding to ALK | [ |
| ALK Copy Number Gain | Two cases; one with and one without an ALK mutation, 4-5-fold increased expression | [ |
| EGFR Alterations | L585R mutation in one case, other cases often show in EGFR and EGFR amplification | [ |
| KRAS Mutations | G12C and G12V activating KRAS mutations | [ |
| c-Kit | 5-fold c-KIT amplification | [ |
| Increased Autophagy | Increased autophagy involves Akt/mTOR signaling, autophagy inhibitors can restore crizotinib sensitivity in cell lines | [ |
| Unknown | Crizotinib resistance by increased expression of unknown oncogenic drivers | [ |