| Literature DB >> 34856074 |
John C Dawson1, Alison Munro1, Kenneth Macleod1, Morwenna Muir1, Paul Timpson2, Robert J Williams3, Margaret Frame1, Valerie G Brunton1, Neil O Carragher1.
Abstract
A more comprehensive understanding of how cells respond to drug intervention, the likely immediate signalling responses and how resistance may develop within different microenvironments will help inform treatment regimes. The nonreceptor tyrosine kinase SRC regulates many cellular signalling processes, and pharmacological inhibition has long been a target of cancer drug discovery projects. Here, we describe the in vitro and in vivo characterisation of the small-molecule SRC inhibitor AZD0424. We show that AZD0424 potently inhibits the phosphorylation of tyrosine-419 of SRC (IC50 ~ 100 nm) in many cancer cell lines; however, inhibition of cell viability, via a G1 cell cycle arrest, was observed only in a subset of cancer cell lines in the low (on target) micromolar range. We profiled the changes in intracellular pathway signalling in cancer cells following exposure to AZD0424 and other targeted therapies using reverse-phase protein array (RPPA) analysis. We demonstrate that SRC is activated in response to treatment of KRAS-mutant colorectal cell lines with MEK inhibitors (trametinib or AZD6244) and that AZD0424 abrogates this. Cell lines treated with trametinib or AZD6244 in combination with AZD0424 had reduced EGFR, FAK and SRC compensatory activation, and cell viability was synergistically inhibited. In vivo, trametinib treatment of mice-bearing HCT116 tumours increased phosphorylation of SRC on Tyr419, and, when combined with AZD0424, inhibition of tumour growth was greater than with trametinib alone. We also demonstrate that drug-induced resistance to trametinib is not re-sensitised by AZD0424 treatment in vitro, likely as a result of multiple compensatory signalling mechanisms; however, inhibition of SRC remains an effective way to block invasion of trametinib-resistant tumour cells. These data imply that SRC inhibition may offer a useful addition to MEK inhibitor combination strategies.Entities:
Keywords: MEK inhibitor; SRC inhibitor; drug combinations; reverse-phase protein array
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34856074 PMCID: PMC8895456 DOI: 10.1002/1878-0261.13151
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Oncol ISSN: 1574-7891 Impact factor: 6.603
Fig. 1Profiling AZD0424 across cancer cell lines. (A) Ranked AZD0424 EC50 values for cell viability of cancer cell lines treated with AZD0424 (n = 3 independent experiments). (B) Cell cycle distribution after 24 h of AZD0424 treatment. Bars represent mean percentage of cells in each stage of the cell cycle ± standard deviation (n = 3 independent experiments). (C) Measurement of nuclei number and apoptosis following 48 h treatment of breast cancer cell lines with AZD0424. Data are mean ± SEM (n = 3 independent experiments). *P < 0.05; **P < 0.01; ***P < 0.001 (two‐way ANOVA).
Fig. 2RPPA profiling of breast cancer cell lines treated with AZD0424. (A), RPPA profiling of AZD0424‐treated breast cancer cell lines. (B) RPPA profiling of total and phosphorylated SRC (Tyr419) in breast cancer cells treated with AZD0424. Mean relative fluorescence intensity (RFI) is shown ± SD (n = 3 technical replicates). (C) Western blot analysis of cell lysates from breast cancer cell lines treated with AZD0424 probed with anti‐SRC and anti‐SRC pY419 antibodies. (D) Cluster of antibodies that display AZD0424 concentration‐dependent inhibition from (A).
Fig. 3MEK inhibitors activate SRC signalling in KRAS‐G13D mutant CRC cell lines. (A) Heatmap showing RPPA profiling of colorectal cell lines treated with MEK inhibitors for 24 h. RFI values are normalised to the average DMSO value across all cell lines per antibody. (B) RPPA profiling of HCT116 and DLD1 cell lines treated with AZD0424 alone or in combination with the MEK inhibitors trametinib or AZD6244 for 24 h. In both (A) and (B), hierarchal clustering using Euclidean distance and complete linkage is shown. Values are normalised to DMSO‐treated samples. (C) Western blot analysis of signalling changes following treatment with AZD0424 (2000 nm) and or trametinib (5 nm) treatment for 24 h. (D) Quantification of western blot changes for phosphorylated SRC Tyr419 and FAK Tyr861. Mean ± SEM is shown (n = 3 independent experiments). *P < 0.05; **P < 0.01; ***P < 0.001 (one‐way ANOVA).
Fig. 4MEK and SRC inhibitors synergistically inhibit proliferation. (A) AZD0424 synergistically inhibits cell viability of DLD1 and HCT116 cells in combination with trametinib or AZD6244. Mean cell viability is shown ± SEM (n = 3 independent experiments). (B) Synergy analysis for trametinib or AZD6244 in combination with AZD0424. Synergy was calculated using the ZIP synergy model. (C) Combination of AZD0424 and trametinib inhibits HCT116 (left) but not DLD1 (right) tumour growth. Tumour volumes are plotted as means ± SEM [n = 4 (DLD1) or 5 (HCT116) mice per group (2 tumours per mouse)]. *P < 0.05 (one‐way ANOVA). (D) Immunohistochemical analysis of phosphorylated SRC Tyr419 and ERK1/2 from 5‐day drug treated tumours [n = 2 mice per group (2 tumours per mouse)]. Scale bars are 100 μm for SRC Tyr419 and 250 μm for pERK1/2, respectively.
Fig. 5SRC and MEK inhibitor combinations do not sensitise drug‐induced resistant cells. (A) Cell viability of cells treated with trametinib. TRAMR. Isogenic wild‐type KRAS HCT116 cells (HKH2). Data are means ± SEM (n = 3 independent experiments). EC50 values are shown in parentheses. (B) Cell viability of HKH2 and TRAMR cells in combination with AZD0424 after 3‐day treatment. Mean cell viability is shown ± SEM (n = 3 independent experiments). (C) Western blot analysis of lysates from cells treated with AZD0424 (2000 nm) or trametinib (5 nm) for 24 h. Representative blots are shown from n = 3 independent experiments. (D) RPPA analysis of lysates from cells treated with AZD0424 (2000 nm), AZD6244 (2000 nm) and trametinib (5 nm) for 24 h. Hierarchal clustering using Euclidean distance and complete linkage is shown. Values are normalised to DMSO‐treated samples. Data are from n = 2 (for HCT116 cells) and n = 3 (TRAMR) independent experiments.
Fig. 6SRC and MEK inhibitor combinations combine to block tumour cell invasion. (A), Organotypic invasion assay. Cells were cultured on top of fibroblast–collagen matrices and allowed to proliferate and invade over a 7‐day period with DMSO, AZD0424 (2000 nm), trametinib (5 nm) or a combination of the two. Images show typical fields of view from H&E‐stained sections from n = 3 independent experiments. (B) Quantification of organotypic invasion in (A). Data are normalised to DMSO values and displayed as means ± SEM (n = 3 independent experiments). *P < 0.05; **P < 0.01; ***P < 0.001 (one‐way ANOVA). Scale bar is 200 μm.