| Literature DB >> 34257586 |
Györgyi A Nelhűbel1,2, Mihály Cserepes1, Balázs Szabó3, Dóra Türk1, Adél Kárpáti1, István Kenessey4,5, Erzsébet Rásó4, Tamás Barbai4, Zita Hegedűs1, Viktória László6,7, Bálint Szokol8, Judit Dobos8, László Őrfi8, József Tóvári1.
Abstract
Background: Anti-EGFR antibody therapy is still one of the clinical choices in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) patients, but the emergence of cetuximab resistance questioned its effectiveness and reduced its applicability. Although several possible reasons of resistance against the antibody treatment and alternative therapeutic proposals have been described (EGFR alterations, activation of other signaling pathways), there is no method to predict the effectiveness of anti-EGFR antibody treatments and to suggest novel therapeutics. Our study investigated the effect of EGFR R521K alteration on efficiency of cetuximab therapy of HNSCC cell lines and tried to find alternative therapeutic approaches against the resistant cells.Entities:
Keywords: EGFR; HNSCC; R521K; c-Met; targeted tumor therapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34257586 PMCID: PMC8262169 DOI: 10.3389/pore.2021.620256
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathol Oncol Res ISSN: 1219-4956 Impact factor: 3.201
PCR primer list used in EGFR genotyping screen.
| Gene | Primer name | Sequence (5′ to 3′) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| EGFR extracellular domain screen | EGFR-ECDos1 (190–210) | CCTGACTCCGTCCAGTATTGA | 392 bp |
| EGFR-ECDoa1 (739–758) | TCACTGCTGACTATGTCCCG | ||
| EGFR-ECDis1 (190–210) | CCTGACTCCGTCCAGTATTGA | ||
| EGFR-ECDia1 (558–582) | GTACATATTTCCTCTGATGATCTGC | ||
| EGFR-ECDos2 (309–328) | GAGTCGGGCTCTGGAGGAAA | 373 bp | |
| EGFR-ECDoa2 (861–880) | TGGTCAGTTTCTGGCAGTTCTC | ||
| EGFR-ECDis2 (498–517) | GGTGGCTGGTTATGTCCTCA | ||
| EGFR-ECDia2 (852–871) | TCTGGCAGTTCTCCTCTCCT | ||
| EGFR-ECDos3 (643–663) | AAGGAGCTGCCCATGACAGAAAT | 376 bp | |
| EGFR-ECDoa3 (1212–1232) | CACTTCTTACACTTGCGGACG | ||
| EGFR-ECDis3 (781–800) | GACTTCCAGAACCACCTGGG | ||
| EGFR-ECDia3 (1134–1157) | TGATCTGTCACCACATAATTACGG | ||
| EGFR-ECDos4 (1061–1080) | CCACCACGTACCAGATGGAT | 388 bp | |
| EGFR-ECDoa4 (1591–1610) | TCCTTGAGGGAGCGTAATCC | ||
| EGFR-ECDis4 (1067–1087) | CGTACCAGATGGATGTGAACC | ||
| EGFR-ECDia4 (1434–1455) | CCCTGTGATTTCCTTTACGGTT | ||
| EGFR-ECDos5 (1334–1353) | CCTCCATCAGTGGCGATCTC | 364 bp | |
| EGFR-ECDoa5 (1895–1916) | TGTATGCACTCAGAGTTCTCCA | ||
| EGFR-ECDis5 (1366–1385) | GTGGCATTTAGGGGTGACTC | ||
| EGFR-ECDia5 (1706–1730) | CCTCTGTTGCTTATAATTTTGGTTT | ||
| EGFR-ECDos6 (1608–1632) | GGAGATAAGTGATGGAGATGTGATA | 368 bp | |
| EGFR-ECDoa6 (2139–2158) | TTGGACAGCCTTTAAGACCT | ||
| EGFR-ECDis6 (1621–1645) | GGAGATGTGATAATTTCAGGAAACA | ||
| EGFR-ECDia6 (1969–1989) | CTGGATACAGTTGTCTGGTCC | ||
| EGFR-ECDos7 (1759–1778) | GTCTGCCATGCCTTGTGCTC | 343 bp | |
| EGFR-ECDoa7 (2319–2339) | AGCTTCTCCACTGGGTGTAAGA | ||
| EGFR-ECDis7 (1911–1930) | CATACAGTGCCACCCAGAGT | ||
| EGFR-ECDia7 (2235–2254) | TTCGCATGAAGAGGCCGATC | ||
| β-actin | βS1 | TCTGGCACCACACCTTCTAC | 387 bp |
| βA4 | CTCCTTAATGTCACGCACGATTTC | ||
| EGFRvIII | EGFRvIIIS | AGTCGGGCTCTGGAGGAAA | 95 bp/896 bp |
| EGFRvIIIA | TCCTCCATCTCATAGCTGTC | ||
| EGFRwt | EGFRwtS | TACCTATGTGCAGAGGAATTATGATCTTT | 89 bp |
| EGFRwtA | CCACTGTGTTGAGGGCAATG |
Primer pairs designed by Array Designer Oligo and cDNA Microarray Design Software—Premier Biosoft International.
FIGURE 1Genetic alterations of EGFR extracellular domain in PE/CA-PJ15 and PJ41 HNSCC cell lines (A) Different SNP pattern in the case of two PE/CA cell lines: PE/CA-PJ15 c720 C > T Asn158Asn homozygous SNP (upper row, left), PE/CA-PJ41 c720 C > T Asn158Asn heterozygous SNP (upper row, right), PE/CA-PJ15 c1808 G > A, Arg521Lys (middle row left); PE/CA-PJ15 c2133 T > A Thr629Thr (lower row, left). (B) investigation of EGFR vIII and EGFR wild type isoforms after mRNA isolation, reverse transcription, PCR and agarose gel electrophoresis. The left side shows that U87 vIII, an EGFR vIII overexpressing glioblastoma cell line expresses the vIII isoform of the receptor, while the two HNSCC cell lines express only the untruncated wild type isoform, showing the amplification of a large region of 896 base pairs. The right side of the image shows that wild type EGFR is present in all of the samples.
FIGURE 2Effects of investigated inhibitors on the in vitro proliferation and apoptosis of HNSCC cell lines. (A,B) While therapeutic antibody cetuximab had no effect on in vitro cell proliferation in any of the two cell lines, small molecule EGFR- and c-MET-specific TKIs and RAS inhibitors were found to be more effective against PJ15 cells compared to PJ41. The combined therapy of HNSCC cells with anti-EGFR compounds shows that cetuximab did not affect cell proliferation, not even in combination, but TKIs and RAS inhibitor have pronounced antiproliferative effect on the two cell lines, which was much stronger on PJ15 cells than on PJ41 cells. Graphs show mean ± SD of four parallel samples, for single drug treatments, and two parallels of combination treatments, quantified as % of control (untreated cells). All values were measured in triplicates. (C) Flow cytometric determination of apoptotic nuclei (subG1 fraction). Erlotinib and zoledronic acid significantly increased the apoptosis in both HNSCC cell lines. However, c-MET-specific inhibitor SU11274 induced apoptosis in the PJ15 cells only. Cetuximab had no effect similarly to results of the proliferation assay. Data are means ± SD of three parallel samples “C”: cetuximab; “E”: erlotinib, “Z”: zoledronic acid; “SU”: SU11274.
FIGURE 3In vivo effect of EGFR-, RAS- and c-MET-inhibitors on growth and metastatic colonization of HNSCC xenografts Subcutaneously growing HNSCC tumor xenografts ((A) PE/CA-PJ15, (B) PE/CA-PJ41) bearing mice were treated i.p. with the EGFR, Ras and c-MET inhibitors mono- and combination therapy as well. In the case of PJ15 cetuximab had no effect on tumor growth, but erlotinib and zoledronic acid decreased significantly the tumor volume either in monotherapy or in combination treatment. However, cetuximab had profound effect on tumor growth of PJ41 xenograft: all the investigated cetuximab-containing therapeutic regimes decreased dramatically the tumor volume. (C–D) Immunohistochemical detection of tumor cells using cytokeratin antibody in spleen ( and liver ( after colonization assay. In the case of cetuximab-resistant PJ15 (C) SU11274 treatment (right pictures in the panel) significantly decreased both the primary tumor mass and the number of tumor colonies in the liver compared to control (left pictures). The primary tumor mass was decreased to 20% of the control in treated animals, and the number of the liver colonies were decreased to less than 40% of the control group (E). However, SU11274 had no effect on either the primary tumor growth or liver colonization of cetuximab-sensitive PJ41 xenografts (F). Graph represent means ± SEM. Significance was measured by Mann-Whitney U-test. “C”: cetuximab; “E”: erlotinib, “Z”: zoledronic acid; “SU”: SU11274.
FIGURE 4Expression of EGFR and c-MET in HNSCC cell lines. EGFR mRNA expression measured by quantitative real-time PCR was nearly 2-fold higher in PE/CA-PJ41 cells compared to the PJ15 cell line (A). Immunocytochemistry of PJ15 ( and PJ41 ( showed that both HNSCC cell lines express the EGFR (B) and c-MET (D) proteins. Moreover, these receptors are active without exogenous ligand activation in these cells detected by phospho-specific antibodies recognizing the active receptors (C,E). However, while EGFR (in line with the flow cytometric data in Table 2) expression is higher in PJ41 cells (B), c-MET and p-c-MET expression was slightly higher in PJ15 cells (D,E). White bars mark 50 μm distance.
Labeling of HNSCC cells with EGFR and c-MET antibodies using flow cytometry.
| PE/CA-PJ15 | PE/CA-PJ41 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| % of positive cells | Mean intensity | % of positive cells | Mean intensity | |
| Control | 4.1 ± 1.13 | 57.0 ± 1.41 | 0.95 ± 0.07 | 44.0 ± 0.01 |
| EGFR extracellular antibody | 75.0 ± 4.24 | 74.3 ± 0.71 | 91.5 ± 2.12 | 107.0 ± 1.42 |
| EGFR intracellular antibody | 98.4 ± 0.71 | 122.5 ± 3.54 | 91.75 ± 1.77 | 110.0 ± 4.24 |
| p-EGFR | 90.4 ± 2.26 | 97.0 ± 1.41 | 89.0 ± 1.41 | 76.5 ± 3.46 |
| c-MET | 95.4 ± 1.34 | 110.5 ± 3.55 | 79.5 ± 6.36 | 97.25 ± 3.89 |
| p-c-MET | 94.8 ± 0.57 | 102.0 ± 1.45 | 78.0 ± 2.83 | 89.8 ± 1.27 |
Proportion of positively gated cells and mean fluorescence intensity values show similar labeling in PE/CA-PJ15 and PE/CA-PJ41 cells. All data represent mean ± SD values from 3 parallel measurements.
FIGURE 5Effect of EGFR, RAS and c-MET inhibition on EGFR and ERK activity in PE/CA-PJ15 and PE/CA-PJ41 cells. Cetuximab treatment effectively decreased EGFR and ERK activity in both cell lines. The signaling activity was measured by Western blot using p-EGFR and p-ERK antibodies. The level of inhibition was comparable to the effect of erlotinib treatment and was more pronounced in PE/CA-PJ15 cells. The total EGFR and ERK labeling served as loading control.