| Literature DB >> 32224870 |
William H Gmeiner1,2, Lance D Miller1,2, Jeff W Chou2, Anthony Dominijanni3, Lysette Mutkus3, Frank Marini1,2,3, Jimmy Ruiz2,4, Travis Dotson2,5, Karl W Thomas2,6, Graham Parks7, Christina R Bellinger2,5.
Abstract
Chemo-immunotherapy is central to the treatment of small cell lung cancer (SCLC). Despite modest progress made with the addition of immunotherapy, current cytotoxic regimens display minimal survival benefit and new treatments are needed. Thymidylate synthase (TS) is a well-validated anti-cancer drug target, but conventional TS inhibitors display limited clinical efficacy in refractory or recurrent SCLC. We performed RNA-Seq analysis to identify gene expression changes in SCLC biopsy samples to provide mechanistic insight into the potential utility of targeting pyrimidine biosynthesis to treat SCLC. We identified systematic dysregulation of pyrimidine biosynthesis, including elevated TYMS expression that likely contributes to the lack of efficacy for current TS inhibitors in SCLC. We also identified E2F1-3 upregulation in SCLC as a potential driver of TYMS expression that may contribute to tumor aggressiveness. To test if TS inhibition could be a viable strategy for SCLC treatment, we developed patient-derived organoids (PDOs) from human SCLC biopsy samples and used these to evaluate both conventional fluoropyrimidine drugs (e.g., 5-fluorouracil), platinum-based drugs, and CF10, a novel fluoropyrimidine polymer with enhanced TS inhibition activity. PDOs were relatively resistant to 5-FU and while moderately sensitive to the front-line agent cisplatin, were relatively more sensitive to CF10. Our studies demonstrate dysregulated pyrimidine biosynthesis contributes to drug resistance in SCLC and indicate that a novel approach to target these pathways may improve outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: RNA-Seq; SCLC; fluoropyrimidine; patient-derived organoid; thymidylate synthase
Year: 2020 PMID: 32224870 PMCID: PMC7226016 DOI: 10.3390/cancers12040788
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Small cell lung cancer (SCLC) samples displayed elevated expression of genes characteristically expressed at elevated levels in SCLC including NCAM1, SYP, CHGA, and DLL3 (displayed data are summarized in Supplementary Table S2).
Figure 2Volcano plot depicting genes important for nucleotide metabolism and pyrimidine biosynthesis that display significantly altered expression in SCLC (blue) relative to non-malignant airway epithelial tissue (pink). Several genes encoding proteins important for de novo Thy biosynthesis are significantly upregulated in SCLC including TYMS and RRM2.
Figure 3Volcano plot depicting genes involved in cell-cycle regulation. E2F1-3 are transcription factors implicated in upregulating genes important for cell-cycle progression including TYMS and RRM2 and are significantly upregulated in SCLC. In the absence of Rb, E2F-family is involved in upregulating genes important for invasion and metastasis including ZEB1 and MMPs, including MMP-11, -16, -26.
Figure 4Volcano plot depicting changes in Myc-family expression in SCLC. Only MYCN was significantly upregulated and MYCNOS was highly expressed. MYCN is highly expressed in neuroendocrine sub-type of SCLC consistent with our samples collectively being representative of this sub-type.
Figure 5The second-generation polymeric fluoropyrimidine CF10 displays improved potency relative to conventional drugs in SCLC patient-derived organoids (PDOs). (A) Dose-response curves for CF10 (blue), cisplatin (red), and 5-FU (black) in SCLC PDOs. PDOs were developed from PDX tumors generated from four different SCLC patient biopsy samples. Aggregate data are shown in Figure S4. Aggregate IC50 values: CF10 14.82 μM; Cisplatin 120.7 μM; 5-FU 381.3 μM. CF10 vs. 5-FU: p < 0.0001; CF10 vs. cisplatin: p < 0.0026. (B) CD56 staining for SCLC clinical sample (left; 400×), PDX (middle; 400×), and PDO (right; 600×).