| Literature DB >> 27738492 |
Katherine R Singleton1, Kris C Wood1.
Abstract
Functional genomics approaches such as gain- and loss-of-function screening can efficiently reveal genes that control cancer cell growth, survival, signal transduction, and drug resistance, but distilling the results of large-scale screens into actionable therapeutic strategies is challenging given our incomplete understanding of the functions of many genes. Research over several decades, including the results of large-scale cancer sequencing projects, has made it clear that many oncogenic properties are controlled by a common set of core oncogenic signaling pathways. By directly screening this core set of pathways, rather than much larger numbers of individual genes, it may be possible to more directly and efficiently connect functional genomic screening results with therapeutic targets. Here, we describe the recent development of methods to directly screen oncogenic pathways in high-throughput. We summarize the results of studies that have used pathway-centric screening to map the pathways of resistance to targeted therapies in diverse cancer types, then conclude by expanding on potential future applications of this approach.Entities:
Keywords: cancer genomics; drug resistance; functional genomics; gain of function screens; signaling pathways
Year: 2016 PMID: 27738492 PMCID: PMC5059112 DOI: 10.18632/genesandcancer.112
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes Cancer ISSN: 1947-6019
cDNAs activating defined oncogenic signaling pathways
| Signaling pathway | Protein | Activating strategy | Validation method |
| Ras-MAPK | KRAS | G12V mutation | Western (P-ERK) |
| HRAS | G12V mutation | Western (P-ERK) | |
| MEK1 | S218D, S222D mutations | Western (P-ERK) | |
| PI3K-AKT-mTOR | PIK3CA | myr-FLAG tag | Western (P-AKT) |
| AKT1 | myr-FLAG tag | Western (P-AKT, P-S6K1) | |
| Rheb | Q64L mutation | Western (P-S6K1) | |
| NF-κB | IKKα | S176E, S180E mutations | Reporter (NF-κB_Luc) |
| IKKβ | S177E, S181E mutations | Reporter (NF-κB_Luc) | |
| Jak/Stat | JAK2 | V617F mutation | Reporter (Stat_Luc) |
| Stat3 | A662C, N664C, V667L mutations | Reporter (Stat_Luc) | |
| Wnt/b-catenin | β-catenin | S33A, S37A, T41A, S45A mutations | Reporter (TCF-LEF_Luc) |
| GSK3β | K85A mutation | Reporter (TCF-LEF_Luc) | |
| β-catenin | S33Y mutation | Reporter (TCF-LEF_Luc) | |
| JNK | JNK2 | WT overexpression | Reporter (AP1_Luc) |
| JNK2 | Mkk7 fusion | Reporter (AP1_Luc) | |
| ERK5 | MEK5 | S311D, T315D mutations | Western (ERK5 laddering) |
| MEK5 | myr-FLAG tag | Western (ERK5 laddering) | |
| Notch | Notch1 | intracellular domain only | Reporter (HES1_Luc) |
| Notch3 | intracellular domain only | Reporter (HES1_Luc) | |
| p38 | p38 (MAPK14) | WT overexpression | Western (P-p38) |
| MKK6 | S207E, T211E mutations | Western (P-p38) | |
| Hedgehog | Gli2 | truncation | Reporter (Gli_Luc) |
| SmoM2 | W535L mutation | Reporter (Gli_Luc) | |
| TGFβ | TGFβR1 | WT overexpression | Immunofluorescence (P-Smad2/3) |
| Mitochondrial apoptosis (intrisic pathway) | BCL2 | WT overexpression | Western (cleaved caspase 9) |
| BCL-XL | WT overexpression | Western (cleaved caspase 9) | |
| Death receptor apoptosis (extrisic pathway) | Caspase-8 | C360A mutation | Western (cleaved caspase 8) |
| All apoptosis | Caspase-3 | C163A mutation | Western (cleaved caspase 3/7) |
| Estrogen receptor | Erα | Y537S mutation | Reporter (ERE_Luc) |
| Androgen receptor | AR | V7 variant | Western (ARE_Luc) |
| Hippo | YAP2 | FLAG-YAP2 (5SA) | Immunofluorescence (nuclear YAP) |
| Lats2 | kinase dead (K697R) | Immunofluorescence (nuclear YAP) | |
| p53 | p53 | dominant negative R175H mutant | Reporter (p53_Luc) |
| Ral | Hras | G12V, E37G mutations | |
| Rgl2 | Rgl2-CAAX | ||
| RalA | G23V (two forms - full and mature peptide) |
Figure 1Example of pathway activating construct activity validation
Target cells (shown here, 293T) were infected with constructs encoding individual pathway activating constructs. Following selection with puromycin, whole cell lysates were collected and immunoblotted for the appropriate markers of pathway activation. For the MAPK pathway activator, constitutively active mutant of MEK1, phospho-ERK was used as an indicator of proper pathway activation.
Figure 2Pathway activating screen results and example validation methods
A. Results of a pathway activating screen on UACC-62 cells for signaling pathways that provide resistance to the MEK inhibitor, AZD6244, at several doses. Abundance of scoring (MAPK, PI3K, NFκB, Notch1 and ER) and control (HcRed, luciferase, MEK1) pathway activators in drug-treated cells relative to diluent- treated cells is shown. B. Screen results can be used to guide investigation of naturally occurring mechanisms of the phenotype of interest. In the setting of resistance, evolved or intrinsically resistant cell lines can have the screen hits inhibited genetically or pharmacologically to investigate whether this reverses resistance. In this example, knock down of Notch1 sensitized MAPKi-resistant cells to the inhibitor. C. The screen hit can be blocked to determine if this prevents the emergence of the phenotype of interest. Here, cells were treated with the screen inhibitor, and inhibitor of the candidate pathway and the combo. Cells were counted weekly and it was observed that only the combination of inhibitors significantly delayed the emergence of resistance. D. Screen results can direct examination of tumor samples. In a survey of relapsed tumor biopsies, a most show evidence of known resistance mechanisms but a subset show activity, mutually exclusive with known mechanisms, of the candidate pathway.