| Literature DB >> 26855149 |
Chiara Ambrogio1, Gonzalo Gómez-López2, Mattia Falcone1, August Vidal3,4, Ernest Nadal5, Nicola Crosetto6, Rafael B Blasco1, Pablo J Fernández-Marcos7, Montserrat Sánchez-Céspedes8, Xiaomei Ren9, Zhen Wang9, Ke Ding9, Manuel Hidalgo10, Manuel Serrano7, Alberto Villanueva4,11, David Santamaría1, Mariano Barbacid1.
Abstract
Patients with advanced Kirsten rat sarcoma viral oncogene homolog (KRAS)-mutant lung adenocarcinoma are currently treated with standard chemotherapy because of a lack of efficacious targeted therapies. We reasoned that the identification of mediators of Kras signaling in early mouse lung hyperplasias might bypass the difficulties that are imposed by intratumor heterogeneity in advanced tumors, and that it might unveil relevant therapeutic targets. Transcriptional profiling of Kras(G12V)-driven mouse hyperplasias revealed intertumor diversity with a subset that exhibited an aggressive transcriptional profile analogous to that of advanced human adenocarcinomas. The top-scoring gene in this profile encodes the tyrosine kinase receptor DDR1. The genetic and pharmacological inhibition of DDR1 blocked tumor initiation and tumor progression, respectively. The concomitant inhibition of both DDR1 and Notch signaling induced the regression of KRAS;TP53-mutant patient-derived lung xenografts (PDX) with a therapeutic efficacy that was at least comparable to that of standard chemotherapy. Our data indicate that the combined inhibition of DDR1 and Notch signaling could be an effective targeted therapy for patients with KRAS-mutant lung adenocarcinoma.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26855149 DOI: 10.1038/nm.4041
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Med ISSN: 1078-8956 Impact factor: 53.440