| Literature DB >> 29468433 |
Dandan Li1, Winifred Lo1,2, Udo Rudloff3.
Abstract
Hereditary diffuse gastric cancer is a cancer predisposition syndrome associated with germline mutations of the E-cadherin gene (CDH1; NM_004360). Male CDH1 germline mutation carriers have by the age of 80 years an estimated 70% cumulative incidence of gastric cancer, females of 56% for gastric and of 42% for lobular breast cancer. Metastatic HDGC has a poor prognosis which is worse than for sporadic gastric cancer. To date, there have been no treatment options described tailored to this molecular subtype of gastric cancer. Here we review recent differential drug screening and gene expression results in c.1380del CDH1-mutant HDGC cells which identified drug classes targeting PI3K (phosphoinositide 3-kinase), MEK (mitogen-activated protein kinase), FAK (focal adhesion kinase), PKC (protein kinase C), and TOPO2 (topoisomerase II) as selectively more effective in cells with defective CDH1 function. ERK1-ERK2 (extracellular signal regulated kinase) signaling measured as top enriched network in c.1380delA CDH1-mutant cells. We compared these findings to synthetic lethality and pharmacological screening results in isogenic CDH1-/- MCF10A mammary epithelial cells with and without CDH1 expression and current knowledge of E-cadherin/catenin-EGFR cross-talk, and suggest different rationales how loss of E-cadherin function activates PI3K, mTOR, EGFR, or FAK signaling. These leads represent molecularly selected treatment options tailored to the treatment of CDH1-deficient familial gastric cancer.Entities:
Keywords: E-Cadherin (CDH1); E-Cadherin/catenin–EGFR cross-talk; Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR); Hereditary diffuse gastric cancer (HDGC); Pharmacological vulnerabilities
Year: 2018 PMID: 29468433 PMCID: PMC5821620 DOI: 10.1186/s40169-018-0184-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transl Med ISSN: 2001-1326
Drug sensitivities derived from in vitro models of HDGC
| CDH1 MCF10A (−/−) [ | CDH1 MCF10A (−/−) [ | c.1380delA CDH1 HDGC [ | c.1380delA CDH1 HDGC [ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| qHTS drug phenotype | Lethality by siRNA target or target ligand | qHTS drug phenotype | Target kinase in enriched top network | |
| Drug class | ||||
| |
| PIK3CA, PIK3CG, PIK3R5, PIK3CB, PIK3CD, PIK3C2B |
| No |
| AKT1 | No | AKT1 | No | No |
| |
|
| Yes | |
| EGFR and PDGFR family inhibitor | Yes | PDGFD, EGFR, ERBB3, NRG1 | No | Yes |
| Src kinase inhibitor | Yes | No | Yes | |
| FAK inhibitor | ? | Yes | Yes | |
| |
| ROS1, ALK |
| No |
| JAK family inhibitor | Yes | JAK2 | No | No |
| BCL2 inhibitor | Yes | BCL2 | No | No |
| |
|
| No | |
| HDAC inhibitor | Yes | HDAC3, HDAC9, SIN3A, RERE | No | |
| ROCK inhibitor | No | Yes | No | |
| Protein kinase C inhibitor | No | Yes | Yes | |
Quantitative high-throughput drug screening of MCF10A mammary epithelial cells vs isogenic CDH1−/− MCF10A cells and hereditary c.1380del CDH1 gastric cancer cells vs sporadic CDH1 wild type SB.msgc-1 cells. Listed are vulnerabilities selective in CDH1−/−-mutant MCF10A and c.1380del CDH1 cells, shared drug classes are highlighted in italics
Active in both c.1380delA CDH1 mutant hereditary SB.mhdgc-1 and control CDH1 wild type SB.msgc-1 gastric cancer cells
Fig. 1Bidirectional E-cadherin/catenin–EGFR cross talk in epithelial biology. Protein–protein interaction with the extracellular cadherin-binding domains of E-cadherin inhibits ligand-mediated activation of EGFR signaling (right); loss of E-cadherin–EGFR interaction leads to increased activation of PI3K, c-Src, and MAPK kinase pathway activation and phosphorylation and destabilization of the E-cadherin/catenin complex (left)
Fig. 2E-Cadherin/catenin–PI3K/AKT crosstalk. Release of negative feedback inhibition of PI3K/AKT signaling via reduced PTEN expression through elevated nuclear β-catenin levels. Disruption of the E-cadherin/catenin complex induces nuclear translocation of β-catenin repressing Egr-1-mediated PTEN expression leading to increased AKT activation