| Literature DB >> 30087852 |
Venus Sosa Iglesias1, Lorena Giuranno1, Ludwig J Dubois1, Jan Theys1, Marc Vooijs1.
Abstract
Drug resistance is a major cause for therapeutic failure in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) leading to tumor recurrence and disease progression. Cell intrinsic mechanisms of resistance include changes in the expression of drug transporters, activation of pro-survival, and anti-apoptotic pathways, as well as non-intrinsic influences of the tumor microenvironment. It has become evident that tumors are composed of a heterogeneous population of cells with different genetic, epigenetic, and phenotypic characteristics that result in diverse responses to therapy, and underlies the emergence of resistant clones. This tumor heterogeneity is driven by subpopulations of tumor cells termed cancer stem cells (CSCs) that have tumor-initiating capabilities, are highly self-renewing, and retain the ability for multi-lineage differentiation. CSCs have been identified in NSCLC and have been associated with chemo- and radiotherapy resistance. Stem cell pathways are frequently deregulated in cancer and are implicated in recurrence after treatment. Here, we focus on the NOTCH signaling pathway, which has a role in stem cell maintenance in non-squamous non-small lung cancer, and we critically assess the potential for targeting the NOTCH pathway to overcome resistance to chemotherapeutic and targeted agents using both preclinical and clinical evidence.Entities:
Keywords: NOTCH/gamma-secretase inhibitor; chemotherapy; non-small cell lung cancer; targeted therapy; treatment resistance
Year: 2018 PMID: 30087852 PMCID: PMC6066509 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2018.00267
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Outcome for preclinical trials in non-small cell lung cancer with GSIs as monotherapy or in combination with other chemotherapeutics or targeted agents.
| Treatment | Outcome | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|
| GSI | Combination | ||
| DAPT | SA |
Least effective clinical GSI in cleaving NOTCH receptors ↑ G1/G0 and G2/M arrest ↓ ALDH+ cells with ↑ NOTCH 1/2/3, HEY1/2 and EGFR low/wt cells: ↓ proliferation GO/G1 arrest, ↑ Beclin-1 Reverts NOTCH-induced EMT phenotype | ( |
| Cisplatin |
↑ P-c-Jun, ↑ AP-1-regulated miR-451, ↓ MDR-1 Cisplatin-treated cells with ↑ drug transporters: sensitive ↓ Viability of cisplatin-resistant CD133+ cells Gefitinib-resistant cells: ↑ NOTCH1, HES1, and cyclin D1, ↓ P21 WAF1/CIP1 GSI + cisplatin/docetaxel/gefitinib: GSI + Pterostilbene: ↓ tumor growth | ( | |
| MRK-003 | SA |
↓ Tumor formation in H1299 stem-like cells expressing ↑ NOTCH 2/4, HES1, HEY1 resistant to cisplatin/docetaxel, rescued by N1/2 ICD (not N3 ICD) in sphere formation ↓ ↓ NOTCH3: ↓ growth and ↑ tumor apoptosis | ( |
| Docetaxel |
GSI + docetaxel: ↓↓ tumor growth IGF-1R sensitizes cells to GSI-induced apoptosis GSI + erlotinib: ↑ ERK-regulated ↑ BIM and ↓ tumor growth | ( | |
| PF-3084014 | SA |
Preferentially ↓ NOTCH2, but also other NOTCH receptors, SPPL2b, APPC100, and APP | ( |
| Erlotinib |
↓ ALDH+ NOTCH3-dependent cells in EGFR negatively regulates Notch activity | ( | |
| RO4929079 | SA |
Preferentially ↓ NOTCH1 followed by NOTCH2/3, SPPL2b and APPC100 | ( |
| Erlotinib |
↓ miR-223, CD44+ erlotinib-resistant cells ↑ FBXW7 and reverses erlotinib-resistance | ( | |
| BMS-708163 | SA |
↓ NOTCH1, HES1, PI3K, and AKT (but not mTOR) and Ki67 ↑ G1 arrest, active caspase 3 and PARP | ( |
| Gefitinib |
↓ 3D colony growth, Ki67, gefitinib-resistant tumor xenograft growth ↑ Cytotoxicity and apoptosis | ||
| LY-685458 | SA |
↓ NOTCH, DLK1-induced ↑ MMP9 expression, invasion | ( |
| LY-411575 | DDR1 inhibitor 7rh |
Additive tumor growth delay of Similar therapeutic efficacy to cisplatin/paclitaxel, but displayed coagulative necrosis, ↓ p-AKT and p-p38 | ( |
| GSI XX | YC-1 HIF inh |
RT-induced HIF-1α ↑ NOTCH3 under hypoxia (reversed by YC-1) GSI XX 24 h post YC-1 + 8 Gy: strongest tumor growth delay | ( |
| GSI? | Cisplatin |
↓ NOTCH3: ↓ the cisplatin-mediated ↑ in spheroid forming efficiencies, LC3 and ↓ ALDHA1, CD44 GSI + ABT-737: synergistic ↓ proliferation, tumor growth | ( |
SA, single agent; ↑, increase/upregulated; ↓, decrease/downregulated; GSI, gamma-secretase inhibitor; GSI?, unspecified GSI; RT, radiotherapy; neg., negative; EGFR, epidermal growth factor receptor; IGF-1R, insulin-like growth factor 1 receptor; DDR1, discoidin domain receptor 1; SPPL2b, signal peptide peptidase-like 2b; APPC100, C-terminal 100 amino acids of amyloid precursor protein; APP, amyloid precursor protein; PI3K, Phosphoinositide 3-kinase; PARP, poly ADP-ribose polymerase 1; DLK1, delta-like non-canonical NOTCH ligand 1; MMP9, matrix metallopeptidase 9.
Outcome for preclinical trials in non-small cell lung cancer with mAbs or natural NOTCH inhibitors (inh) alone or in combination with other chemotherapeutics or targeted agents.
| Treatment | Outcome | Reference | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NOTCH-based | Combination | |||
| mAb | CT16 (anti-EGFR and anti-NOTCH 2/3) | SA |
↓ Tumor-initiating capacity upon reimplantation, tumor growth and reversal of EMT phenotype Cetuximab and erlotinib-resistant cell lines: not effective | ( |
| RT |
↓ RT-enriched CD133+, EGFR inh-enriched ALDH+ ↓ The RT-induced EMT (upregulated in CD133+ but not in ALDH+ cells) and DNA repair genes Prevented tumor regrowth, delayed acquired resistance to EGFR inhibitors | ( | ||
| Tarextumab (anti-NOTCH 2/3) | SA |
↓ Tumor-initiating capacity upon reimplantation | ( | |
| Erlotinib |
Additive effect on NOTCH3+ NSCLC PDX | |||
| HD105 (anti-DLL4 and anti-VEGF) | SA |
↓ Cell proliferation, vessel sprouting and ↑ apoptosis ↓ Tumor progression | ( | |
| Murine anti-DLL4 | SA |
↑ CD31+ tumor vessel density ↑ Thin and more branched vessels | ( | |
| Murine anti-VEGF antibody |
↓ Tumor vessel density and functionality | |||
| Demcizumab (anti-DLL4) | Abl, Src, c-Kit, and DDR1 inh. Dasatinib |
Durable and better therapeutic efficacy than cisplatin/paclitaxel in orthotopic PDX | ( | |
| Natural inh | Nobiletin (citrus peels) | SA |
↑ miR-200b under hypoxia ↓ NOTCH1, JAGGED1/2, HES1 and HEY1 (but not NOTCH2/3, nicastrin: presenilin 1/2 and APHl) independent of gamma-secretase, ↓ invasion in Matrigel Reversal of hypoxic-induced EMT phenotype | ( |
| Delta-tocotrienol (blueberries) | SA |
↓ NOTCH1, colony formation and invasiveness ↑ miR-34a G0–G1 arrest, apoptosis | ( | |
| Cisplatin |
Potentiates antitumorigenic effect ↑ NF-κB DNA binding activity ↓ NOTCH1, HES1, Bcl-2, cleaved caspase-3 and PARP | ( | ||
| Curcumin (ginger and other plants) | SA |
↓ NOTCHl by ↓ EZH2 Delays tumor growth and prevents metastasis | ( | |
| Delphinidin (berries) | Bilberry anthocyanidins |
↓ Cell proliferation and migration: ↓ NF-κB, NOTCH1, β-catenin, c-MYC, MMP9, Cyclin D1 and B1 ↑ G2/M arrest, apoptosis ↓ Tumor growth | ( | |
SA, single agent; ↑, increase/upregulated; ↓: decrease/downregulated; NSCLC, non-small cell lung cancer; RT, radiotherapy; EGFR, epidermal growth factor receptor; DDR1, discoidin domain receptor 1; PDX, patient-derived xenograft; VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor; EMT, epithelial–mesenchymal transition; PARP, poly ADP-ribose polymerase; EZH2, enhancer of zeste homolog 2; APH1, anterior pharynx-defective 1; MMP9, matrix metalloprotease 9; mAbs, monoclonal antibodies.
Comparison between preclinical in vivo doses of NOTCH-targeted agents used for non-small cell lung cancer treatment.
| Treatment | Preclinical dose | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Type | Name | ||
| GSI | DAPT | 8 mg/kg ip 3 days/week or l0 mg/kg ip once every 3 days * 6 injections | ( |
| MRK-003 | 150 mg/kg 3 days/week | ( | |
| BMS-708163 | 10 mg/kg po 5 days/week | ( | |
| LY-411575 | 3 mg/kg po daily | ( | |
| GSI XX | 200 µg/kg ip 3 days/week * 2 cycles | ( | |
| GSI? | 200 µg/kg ip 3 days/week * 2 cycles | ( | |
| mAb | CT16 (anti-EGFR and anti-NOTCH 2/3) | 40 mg/kg | ( |
| Tarextumab (anti-NOTCH 2/3) | 40 mg/kg | ( | |
| HD105 (anti-DLL 4 and anti-VEGF) | 3.25 mg/kg ip 1–2 days/week or 6.5 mg/kg ip 1 day/week | ( | |
| Murine anti-DLL4 | 2.5 mg/kg ip 1–2 days/week | ( | |
| Demcizumab (anti-DLL4) | 10 mg/kg ip 1 day/week | ( | |
GSI, gamma-secretase inhibitor; mAb, monoclonal antibody; ip, intraperitoneal; po, .
Figure 1Notch and the Hallmarks of Cancer in tumor resistance to chemotherapy and targeted agents in NSCLC. NOTCH1 sustains proliferative signaling by upregulating PI3K/AKT pathway via PTEN repression and induction of IGF-1R under hypoxia. PI3K/AKT and MAPK/ERK/RAS then upregulate HIF-1α in an oxygen-dependent manner. HIF-1α binds to N1 ICD to regulate each other: HIF-1α increases gamma-secretase activity to activate NOTCH signaling whereas factor inhibitor HIF (FIH) hydroxylates and downregulates NICD activity. NOTCH1 upregulates IGF-1R which forms a heterodimer (∞) with EGFR and increases survivin (apoptosis inhibitor) to resist cell death. Cancer cells also resist cell death by upregulating the autophagosomal marker LC3 and/or drug transporters (ABCB1 and ABCG2) mediated by NOTCH-dependent AP1/microRNA-451 or through a glycolysis-associated mechanism via FOXO3a/AKT signaling thus promoting deregulation of cellular energetics. CSL binds to TP53 and they can both repress each other thus evading growth suppressors. NOTCH signaling also has a role in the maintenance of cancer stem cells (CSCs). Chemotherapy induces an enrichment of resistant tumor cells expressing CSC markers (CD133, ALDH, CD44). CSCs have downregulated the AQP2 and CTR1 drug transporters which prevent drug accumulation and reduce dsDNA damage. In addition, CSCs have increased DDR and repair pathways. NOTCH facilitates metastasis by increasing the epithelial–mesenchymal transition (EMT) via an increase in TWIST, SNAIL, SLUG, and ZEB. NOTCH activation can also stimulate endothelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EndMT) which increases the production of cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAF) which are known to be involved in chemotherapy resistance. DLL4 ligand is positively regulated by proangiogenic factors (e.g., VEGF-A, bFGF), IL-6 mediated by STAT3 activation, FOXC protein, N4 ICD, and HIF-1α to induce angiogenesis. DLL4 downregulates VEGFR2 to inhibit VEGF-A and endothelial cell proliferation and migration. DLL4 ligand targeting inhibits tumor progression of human lung adenocarcinomas. Upregulated NOTCH signaling activity has been found in cancers with other genetic alterations/mutations [KRAS, EGFR, HER2, MET, anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK), PI3K] with which it cross-talks. Abbreviations: I, inhibitor; DDR, DNA-damage response; miR, microRNA; GSI: gamma-secretase inhibitor; dsDNA, double stranded deoxyribonucleic acid; N4 ICD, NOTCH 4 intracellular domain.
Maximum tolerated dose (MTD) and recommended phase 2 doses (RP2D) for NOTCH-based therapies in clinical trials for advanced or metastatic solid tumors who no longer respond to or have relapsed from standard therapies.
| Treatment | MTD | RP2D | Type of cancer tested | Clinical trial ID | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type | Name | ||||
| GSI | PF-03084014 | 220 mg po b.i.d. | 150 mg po b.i.d. | Lung, colon, desmoid, breast, thyroid, endometrial, leiomyosarcoma, pancreas, and liver | ( |
| RO4929097 | NR (MDT: 20 mg 3 days/week) | 20 mg 3 days/week | NSCLC, sarcoma, neuroendocrine, SCC, head and neck, pancreas, breast, colorectal high-grade glioma, renal, ovarian, gastrointestinal, stromal, melanoma, hepatocellular, endometrial, and cholangiocarcinoma | ( | |
| LY900009 | 30 mg 3×/week | UD (<30 mg 3×/week) | NSCLC, colorectal, endometrial, ovarian, pancreatic, sarcoma, papillary adenocarcinoma, and leiomyosarcoma | NCT01158404 ( | |
| LY3039478 | ONG (MDT: po Q12H) | Advanced solid tumors | NCT02836600; NCT02784795 | ||
| BMS-906024 | ONG (MDT: 6 mg iv QW) | NSCLC, triple-negative breast cancer, and tumors with proven active NOTCH | NCT01292655, NCT01653470 | ||
| MK-0752 | UD (MDT: 4,200 mg po daily) | (UD dose >1,800 mg) po QW | NSCLC, high-grade glioma, glioblastoma multiforme, anaplastic astrocytoma, meningioma, mesothelioma, oligoastrocytoma, oligodendroglioma, leiomyosarcoma, bladder, breast, colorectal, kidney, endometnal, gastrointestinal, head and neck, melanoma, ovarian, pancreas, sarcoma, thyroid, urothelial, and stromal | ( | |
| BMS-986115 | UD (MDT: QD) | Advanced solid tumors | NCT01986218 | ||
| mAb anti-DLL4 | Enoticumab | NR | 4 mg/kg Q3W or 3 mg/kg Q2W | Lung, NSCLC bronchoalveolar-type, colorectal, ovarian, pancreatic, sarcoma, breast, salivary gland, head and neck, thyroid, prostate, cholangiocarcinoma, and hepatocellular | ( |
| Demcizumab | NR | 5 mg/kg Q2W (with cardio-protective agents) | NSCLC, SCLC, colorectal, renal, pancreatic, salivary gland, breast, sarcoma, kidney, melanoma, head and neck, gastric, prostate, bladder, esophageal, ovarian, testicular, penile, and mesothelioma | ( | |
| MEDI0639 | NR | Lack of clinical activity | Advanced solid tumors | NCT01577745 | |
Life expectancy ≥ 3 months.
SCC, squamous cell carcinoma,; NSCLC, non-small cell lung cancer; SCLC, small cell lung cancer; po, .
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Outcome and on-target effects of NOTCH-targeted therapies in clinical trials where lung cancer patients have been included.
| Treatment | Outcome | On-target effects | Clinical trial ID | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NOTCH-based | Combination | ||||
| GSI | PF-03084014 | SA | ORR 13%: 46 patients | ↓ HES4 in peripheral blood at RP2D | ( |
| RO4929097 | SA | 5/5 DP | IC | NCT01193868 | |
| VEGFR inh cediranib or mTOR inh Temsirolimus | 1 PR at best | No ∞ NOTCH biomarkers and time to progression at RP2D | ( | ||
| LY900009 | SA | No OR 5/35 SD (NSCLC; papillary adenocarcinoma, leiomyosarcoma, ureter, and rectal carcinoma) | ↓ Aβ in plasma 1/35 ↑ glandular mucin | NCT01158404 ( | |
| MK-0752 | SA | 1 CR ≥ 1 year (anaplastic astrocytoma) | ↓ NOTCH in hair follicles (l,800–4,200 mg po 1×/week) | ( | |
| Dalotuzumab anti-IGFR1 | 12/12 DP | UD | ( | ||
| mAb anti-DLL4 | Enoticumab | SA | 2/44 PR (NSCLC bronchoalveolar-type and ovarian cancer) | In 39/40 tumors
DLL4+ and CD31+ 30% VEGFR2+ vessels ∞ N1 and N3 ICD in tumor, NOTCH3 and DLL4 in vessels No ∞ NOTCH biomarkers and time to progression | ( |
| Demcizumab | SA | 21/48 SD (NSCLC, renal and colorectal carcinomas) | In blood:
↓ NOTCH and WNT pathway genes ( ↑ Negative regulators ( ↓ Stem cell genes ↑ vascular genes | ( | |
| MEDI0639 | SA | 1 PR for 1.3 months 9/25 SD for 5.9 months | IC | NCT01577745 | |
GSI, gamma-secretase inhibitor; mAb, monoclonal antibody; inh, inhibitor; SA, single agent; ↑, increase/upregulated; ↓, decrease/downregulated; ORR, objective response rate; OR, objective response; CR, complete response; PR, partial response; DP, disease progression; adv., advanced; RP2D, recommended phase 2 dose; IC, inconclusive; SD, stable disease; PFS, progression-free survival; OS, overall survival; ∞, association; Aβ, amyloid-β peptide; NSCLC, non-small cell lung cancer; po, .
Associated toxicities of NOTCH-based therapies used preclinically for non-small cell lung cancer.
| Treatment | Dose | Toxicity | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type | Name | |||
| GSI | MRK-003 | 100 mg/kg po 3 days |
Diarrhea, dehydration, severe weight loss | ( |
| PF-3084014 | 150 mg/kg po 7 days |
Goblet cell hyperplasia ↓ Total whole blood count, lymphocytes, basophils, eosinophils, leukocytes Mild jejunal eosinophilic inflammation | ( | |
| 100 mg/kg GSI, 3 weeks * 2 cycles; 1.0 mg/kg dexamethasone on weeks 1 and 3 |
Dexamethasone ameliorates gastrointestinal effects (DLT) | |||
| LY-411575 | 1–10 mg/kg po 5 or 15 days |
Altered lymphocyte development, thymus atrophy, ↓ body weight ↑ Goblet cell number, secretion of mucin into the intestinal lumen, epithelial erosion, infiltration of inflammatory cells in the lamina propria and necrosis Skin: epidermal/epithelial hyperplasia, follicular/epidermal inclusion cysts | ( | |
| GSI | 10 µmol/kg 1 day |
Gastrointestinal mucous metaplasia, conversion of cryptal cells into goblet cells (goblet cell hyperplasia) | ( | |
| DBZ |
2.5 mL/kg ip 5 days 3–30 µmol/kg ip 5 days 10 µmol/kg daily 4 weeks |
Distension of the stomach and intestine ↑ Mucous, goblet cell metaplasia (duodenum, jejunum) and hyperplasia, apoptosis (small intestinal crypt epithelial cells, large intestinal glands), villus atrophy, and severe diarrhea Splenic marginal zone lymphoid tissue atrophy | ( | |
| DBZ 10 µmol/kg ip |
DBZ: ↑ intestinal secretory metaplasia, goblet cell hyperplasia and Combination: normal goblet cell numbers and tissue architecture of intestinal epithelium | ( | ||
| mAb | OMP59R5 (anti-NOTCH2/3) | 40 mg/kg every other day |
Minimal intestinal toxicity Rodent teeth affectance (long-term repeated high doses) | ( |
| HD105 (anti-DLL4 and anti-VEGF) | 1–3 mg/kg QW for 8 weeks |
↑ Activation of endothelial cells Sinusoidal dilation Centrilobular hepatocyte atrophy | ( | |
| Anti-DLL4 | 10 mg/kg 2 weeks |
No impact on intestinal goblet cell differentiation | ( | |
| Natural agents | Delta-tocotrienol (blueberries) | 200–800 mg/kg sc 14–30 days |
Dose-dependent severity (up to moderately severe) of dermatitis and inflammation No adverse effects were observed in any tissues or organs | ( |
| Curcumin (ginger and other plants) | iv 14 days:
250 mg/kg 500–1,000 mg/kg |
250 mg/kg: piloerection and minor weight loss 500 mg/kg: ↓ spontaneous motility and bowel movements, piloerection and ↓ weight (in 3 mice) 1,000 mg/kg: lethal within 1 h of administration, respiratory distress, bradypnea, and paralytic gait | ( | |
GSI, gamma-secretase inhibitor; mAb, monoclonal antibody; ip, intraperitoneal; po, .
Toxicity and pharmacokinetics (PK) of NOTCH-targeted therapies in clinical trials where lung cancer patients have been included.
| Treatment | Toxicity | PK | Clinical trial ID | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NOTCH-based | Combination | ||||
| M | PF-03084014 | SA | Manageable gastrointestinal adverse events | T1/2: 22–40 h after-multiple dosing. | ( |
| RO4929097 | SA | Serious adverse events in ≥1/5 patients:
Small intestine obstruction, constipation, nausea Lung infection/sepsis, dyspnea Cardiac arrest, tachycardia | UD | NCT01 19386; NCT01217411 | |
| VEGFR inh cediranib | Grade III–IV: diarrhea, headache, hypertension, nausea, hypothyroidism, hypophosphatemia | Combination did not affect PK profile | ( | ||
| mTOR inh temsirolimus | Grade III: rash, mucositis | RO4929097 induces CYP3A4: ↑ temsirolimus CL | ( | ||
| LY900009 | SA | Grade III: mucosal inflammation | Absorption: 1–4 h | NCT01158404 ( | |
| SA | Weekly dosing was generally well tolerated | Slow absorption half-life: 15 h | ( | ||
| MK-0752 | Dalotuzumab anti-IGFR1 | Grade III dehydration, rash, and diarrhea |
MK-0752 1.63–8 μmol/L in plasma Dalotuzumab 34–64 μg/mL in serum (at day 8), accumulated in time | ( | |
| mAb anti-DLL4 | Enoticumab ( | SA | Grade III (0.5 mg/kg Q3W): nausea | Nonlinear PK | ( |
| Demcizumab | SA | Generally well tolerated at doses ≤ 5 mg weekly. | PK within linear range | ( | |
| MEDI0639 | SA | No participants with DLT | AUC: 7.4–512 μg/day/mL [Conc]Max; in blood: 3.2–81.6 μg/mL | NCT01577745 | |
GSI, gamma-secretase inhibitor; mAb, monoclonal antibody; inh, inhibitor; SA, single agent; ID, identifier; .
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