| Literature DB >> 25453081 |
Tony Yuen1, Agnes Stachnik1, Jameel Iqbal1, Miriam Sgobba2, Yogesh Gupta1, Ping Lu1, Graziana Colaianni3, Yaoting Ji4, Ling-Ling Zhu4, Se-Min Kim1, Jianhua Li1, Peng Liu1, Sudeh Izadmehr1, Jaya Sangodkar1, Jack Bailey1, Yathin Latif1, Shiraz Mujtaba1, Solomon Epstein1, Terry F Davies1, Zhuan Bian5, Alberta Zallone6, Aneel K Aggarwal1, Shozeb Haider2, Maria I New7, Li Sun1, Goutham Narla8, Mone Zaidi7.
Abstract
Bisphosphonates are the most commonly prescribed medicines for osteoporosis and skeletal metastases. The drugs have also been shown to reduce cancer progression, but only in certain patient subgroups, suggesting that there is a molecular entity that mediates bisphosphonate action on tumor cells. Using connectivity mapping, we identified human epidermal growth factor receptors (human EGFR or HER) as a potential new molecular entity for bisphosphonate action. Protein thermal shift and cell-free kinase assays, together with computational modeling, demonstrated that N-containing bisphosphonates directly bind to the kinase domain of HER1/2 to cause a global reduction in downstream signaling. By doing so, the drugs kill lung, breast, and colon cancer cells that are driven by activating mutations or overexpression of HER1. Knocking down HER isoforms thus abrogates cell killing by bisphosphonates, establishing complete HER dependence and ruling out a significant role for other receptor tyrosine kinases or the enzyme farnesyl pyrophosphate synthase. Consistent with this finding, colon cancer cells expressing low levels of HER do not respond to bisphosphonates. The results suggest that bisphosphonates can potentially be repurposed for the prevention and therapy of HER family-driven cancers.Entities:
Keywords: Her2/neu; drug repurposing; osteoporosis; receptor tyrosine kinase; tyrosine kinase inhibitor
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25453081 PMCID: PMC4273397 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1421410111
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205