| Literature DB >> 32430388 |
Vito Amodio1,2, Rona Yaeger3, Pamela Arcella1,2, Alberto Bardelli4,2, Sandra Misale5, Carlotta Cancelliere1, Simona Lamba1, Annalisa Lorenzato1,2, Sabrina Arena1,2, Monica Montone1, Benedetta Mussolin1, Yu Bian6, Adele Whaley6, Marika Pinnelli1,2, Yonina R Murciano-Goroff3, Efsevia Vakiani7, Nicola Valeri8,9, Wei-Li Liao10, Anuja Bhalkikar10, Sheeno Thyparambil10, Hui-Yong Zhao6,11, Elisa de Stanchina6,11, Silvia Marsoni12,13, Salvatore Siena12,14, Andrea Bertotti1,2, Livio Trusolino1,2, Bob T Li3,15, Neal Rosen6,16, Federica Di Nicolantonio1,2.
Abstract
Most patients with KRAS G12C-mutant non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) experience clinical benefit from selective KRASG12C inhibition, whereas patients with colorectal cancer bearing the same mutation rarely respond. To investigate the cause of the limited efficacy of KRASG12C inhibitors in colorectal cancer, we examined the effects of AMG510 in KRAS G12C colorectal cancer cell lines. Unlike NSCLC cell lines, KRAS G12C colorectal cancer models have high basal receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) activation and are responsive to growth factor stimulation. In colorectal cancer lines, KRASG12C inhibition induces higher phospho-ERK rebound than in NSCLC cells. Although upstream activation of several RTKs interferes with KRASG12C blockade, we identify EGFR signaling as the dominant mechanism of colorectal cancer resistance to KRASG12C inhibitors. The combinatorial targeting of EGFR and KRASG12C is highly effective in colorectal cancer cells and patient-derived organoids and xenografts, suggesting a novel therapeutic strategy to treat patients with KRAS G12C colorectal cancer. SIGNIFICANCE: The efficacy of KRASG12C inhibitors in NSCLC and colorectal cancer is lineage-specific. RTK dependency and signaling rebound kinetics are responsible for sensitivity or resistance to KRASG12C inhibition in colorectal cancer. EGFR and KRASG12C should be concomitantly inhibited to overcome resistance to KRASG12C blockade in colorectal tumors.See related commentary by Koleilat and Kwong, p. 1094.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1079. ©2020 American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32430388 PMCID: PMC7416460 DOI: 10.1158/2159-8290.CD-20-0187
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Discov ISSN: 2159-8274 Impact factor: 38.272