| Literature DB >> 35004241 |
Kiran Kundu1, Robert J Cardnell1, Bingnan Zhang2, Li Shen3, C Allison Stewart1, Kavya Ramkumar1, Kasey R Cargill1, Jing Wang3, Carl M Gay1, Lauren A Byers1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Lurbinectedin recently received FDA accelerated approval as a second line treatment option for metastatic small cell lung cancer (SCLC). However, there are currently no established biomarkers to predict SCLC sensitivity or resistance to lurbinectedin or preclinical studies to guide rational combinations.Entities:
Keywords: SLFN11; Small cell lung cancer (SCLC); ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3-related protein (ATR); lurbinectedin; replication stress
Year: 2021 PMID: 35004241 PMCID: PMC8674596 DOI: 10.21037/tlcr-21-437
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Lung Cancer Res ISSN: 2218-6751
Figure 1SLFN11 predicts sensitivity to lurbinectedin in SCLC. (A) Sensitivity of a panel of 21 human SCLC cell lines to lurbinectedin (ranked by IC50) and color coded for SCLC subtypes. (B) Spearman correlation of RPPA protein markers and IC50 values in panel of 21 cell lines (P<0.05). (C) Comparison of lurbinectedin IC50 values between cell lines with high and low SLFN11 expression by RPPA (bi-modal separation, mean ± SEM, P value by t-test). (D) Comparison of lurbinectedin IC50 values between cell lines from the four SCLC subtypes SCLA-A (n=12), -N (n=4), -P (n=3) and -I (n=2) (P values by t-test). (E) Western-blot showing knockdown of SLFN11 following siRNA DMS79 and H209 cell lines. (F) Sensitivity of cell lines following SLFN11 knockdown. (G,H) Tumor growth curves of SLFN11 high xenografts (DMS79) and SLFN11 low xenografts (H865) treated with vehicle, lurbinectedin (0.1 mg/kg), or cisplatin (6 mg/kg) (**, P=0.01 by un-paired t-test).
Figure 2Induction of DNA damage and PD-L1 expression following lurbinectedin treatment. (A) Western-blot showing changes in replication stress markers (pCHK1 and pRPA32) and DNA damage (pγH2Ax) in SCLC cell lines following 24- and 48-hour treatment with DMSO or lurbinectedin (Lurbi, 0.9 nM). (B) Treatment with lurbinectedin activates cGAS, phosphorylates STING and increases PD-L1 expression in SCLC-P and SCLC-I cell lines.
Figure 3Combination of lurbinectedin with ATR inhibitor is greater than additive in SLFN11 low cell lines. (A) Relative proliferation of cell lines representing greater than additive, and additive responses following 96 h treatment with lurbinectedin (Lurbi), ceralasertib and their combination at indicated concentrations (mean ± SEM). (B) Bar-graph representing ∆AUC for all 21 cell lines tested, color coded by SCLC subtype. ∆AUC value denotes difference in area under the dose-response curve of the observed drug combination and the predicted additive effect of the single agents was calculated using the BLISS independence model. ∆AUC <−0.1 indicates a greater than additive effect of the combination. (C) Comparison of ∆AUC values between cell lines with high and low SLFN11 expression by RPPA (bi-modal separation, mean ± SEM, P values by t-test) shows a better response to the combination in SLFN11 low cell lines. (D) Western-blot showing changes in pCHK1, pγH2Ax and cleaved caspase3 in H211 and H865 cell lines treated with 0.6 nM of lurbinectedin, 0.3 µM of ceralasertib and their combination.