| Literature DB >> 26466569 |
Chao Zhang1, Wayne Spevak1, Ying Zhang1, Elizabeth A Burton1, Yan Ma1, Gaston Habets1, Jiazhong Zhang1, Jack Lin1, Todd Ewing1, Bernice Matusow1, Garson Tsang1, Adhirai Marimuthu1, Hanna Cho1, Guoxian Wu1, Weiru Wang1, Daniel Fong1, Hoa Nguyen1, Songyuan Shi1, Patrick Womack1, Marika Nespi1, Rafe Shellooe1, Heidi Carias1, Ben Powell1, Emily Light1, Laura Sanftner1, Jason Walters1, James Tsai1, Brian L West1, Gary Visor1, Hamid Rezaei1, Paul S Lin1, Keith Nolop1, Prabha N Ibrahim1, Peter Hirth1, Gideon Bollag1.
Abstract
Oncogenic activation of BRAF fuels cancer growth by constitutively promoting RAS-independent mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway signalling. Accordingly, RAF inhibitors have brought substantially improved personalized treatment of metastatic melanoma. However, these targeted agents have also revealed an unexpected consequence: stimulated growth of certain cancers. Structurally diverse ATP-competitive RAF inhibitors can either inhibit or paradoxically activate the MAPK pathway, depending whether activation is by BRAF mutation or by an upstream event, such as RAS mutation or receptor tyrosine kinase activation. Here we have identified next-generation RAF inhibitors (dubbed 'paradox breakers') that suppress mutant BRAF cells without activating the MAPK pathway in cells bearing upstream activation. In cells that express the same HRAS mutation prevalent in squamous tumours from patients treated with RAF inhibitors, the first-generation RAF inhibitor vemurafenib stimulated in vitro and in vivo growth and induced expression of MAPK pathway response genes; by contrast the paradox breakers PLX7904 and PLX8394 had no effect. Paradox breakers also overcame several known mechanisms of resistance to first-generation RAF inhibitors. Dissociating MAPK pathway inhibition from paradoxical activation might yield both improved safety and more durable efficacy than first-generation RAF inhibitors, a concept currently undergoing human clinical evaluation with PLX8394.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26466569 DOI: 10.1038/nature14982
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962