| Literature DB >> 29285287 |
Jung Eun Kim1, Youjin Kim1, Gary Li2, Seung Tae Kim1, Kyung Kim1, Se Hoon Park1, Joon Oh Park1, Young Suk Park1, Ho Yeong Lim1, Hyuk Lee2, Tae Sung Sohn2, Kyoung-Mee Kim3, Won Ki Kang1, Jeeyun Lee1.
Abstract
RXDX-106 is a potent and selective type II pseudo-irreversible (slow off-rate) inhibitor of TYRO3, AXL, MER and c-MET. MER tyrosine kinase (MerTK) is expressed in a variety of malignancies, including gastric cancer (GC). The oncogenic potential of MerTK is supported by various lines of evidence. First, we surveyed 10 GC cell lines for MerTK protein overexpression and MerTk phosphorylation. We next evaluated the change of downstream signaling molecules including (p)-ERK and (p)-AKT, following RXDX-106 treatment. We also investigated the effect of RXDX-106 in patient-derived cell lines to mimic the in vivo condition. The prevalence of MerTK protein overexpression was evaluated in 229 cancer tissue specimens. We have found that MerTK inhibitor treatment resulted in considerable inhibition of cell growth and downstream signaling. In addition, MerTK phosphorylation, not total MerTK expression, is likely more predictive of therapeutic success. p-MerTK protein overexpression by IHC was found in 18% (17/87) of GC patients. Lastly, RXDX-106 inhibited cell proliferation in MerTK activated gastric cancer cell line. These findings provide further evidence of oncogenic roles for MerTK in GC, and demonstrate the importance of kinase activity for MerTK tumorigeneicity and validate RXDX-106, a novel MerTK inhibitor, as a potential therapeutic agent for treatment of GC.Entities:
Keywords: MerTK; gastric cancer; patient-derived tumor cells
Year: 2017 PMID: 29285287 PMCID: PMC5739674 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.22394
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1The effect of RXDX-106 in gastric cancer cell lines
(A) Basal protein expression level of p-MerTK and MerTK, the target of RXDX-106, in gastric cancer cell lines. (B) Results of cell viability under 1μM RXDX-106 treatment. Statistical significance was calculated using paired t-test and is indicated with *** for p-value < 0.0001. (C, D) Molecular change of proliferative signaling molecules and RXDX-106 targeted molecules. For Western blotting, cells were exposed to 1μM RXDX-106 for 3 days or indicated time.
Figure 2Anti-cancer effect of RXDX-106 in PDCs
(A) Diversity of p-MerTK and MerTK expression level in PDCs using Western blot analysis. (B) Results of cell viability under 1 μM RXDX-106 treatment. Statistical significance was calculated using paired t-test and is indicated with *** for p-value < 0.0001. (C) Molecular change of proliferative signaling molecules and RXDX-106 target molecules in PDCs. (D) The change of cell death related proteins in PDCs. For Western blotting, PDCs were exposed to RXDX-106 at 1 μM concentration for 3 days. β-actin used as loading control.
Figure 3Reduction of PD-L1 expression under RXDX-106 exposure in sensitive cell line
(A) Basal expression of PD-L1 in gastric cancer cell lines. (B) RXDX-106 affects STAT3 and PD-L1. For Western blotting, cells were exposed to RXDX-106 at 1 μM concentration for 3 days. β-actin used as loading control. (C) Representative photomicrographs (X40) of SNU-638 and SNU-668 cell pellets stained by the PD-L1 ICC assay.
Analysis of phosphor-MerTK expression in various cancer types
| Tumor type | p-MERTK | Total N | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Negative | Positive | (n=229) | |
| 68(78.2%) | 17(19.5%) | 87 | |
| 44(95.7%) | 2(4.3%) | 46 | |
| 13(81.3%) | 3(18.7%) | 16 | |
| 5(100%) | 0(0.0%) | 5 | |
| 13(86.7%) | 2(13.3%) | 15 | |
| 6(66.7%) | 3(33.3%) | 9 | |
| 21(72.4%) | 8(27.6%) | 29 | |
| 4(66.7%) | 2(33.3%) | 6 | |
| 4(100%) | 0(0.0%) | 4 | |
| 11(91.6%) | 1(8.3%) | 12 | |
Figure 4Representative photomicrograph of immunohistochemistry for Anti-MerTK (phospho Y681 + Y749)
Low powered view (x40) with strong positive nuclear staining (A), and it's higher powered view (x400) (B), low powered view (x40) with negative nuclear staining (C), and it's higher powered view (x400) (D).