| Literature DB >> 35800379 |
Ravi Velaga1, Sunao Tanaka1, Masakazu Toi1.
Abstract
Over the past two decades, high sensitivity to HER2-amplified primary breast cancers has been achieved with HER2-targeted therapies. CDK4/6 inhibitors have long been identified as a potential treatment option for advanced breast cancer patients. However, acquired HER2 heterogeneity leading to resistance during the treatment has been identified as a bottleneck. This review focuses on the recent resistance mechanisms identified and potential therapeutic targets for conventional and combination endocrine therapies with CDK4/6 inhibitors by various breast cancer clinical trials and research groups in HER amplified and/or mutated breast cancer tumour. Activating HER2 alterations, JNK pathway, hyperactivated TORC1, co-mutations in HER2 and HER3, phenotypic changes of HER2, and few other advanced findings are identified as potential therapeutic targets in treating current HER2 endocrine therapy-resistant tumour. Along with the HER2-focused resistance mechanisms, we also describe how the microbiome may play a role in breast cancer therapy and its potential for new therapeutic strategies to overcome drug resistance in breast cancers.Entities:
Keywords: CDK4/6; HER2; HER2 and HER3 co-mutations; JNK pathway; MONALESSA-2 trial; drug resistance; hot and cold tumour; microbiome
Year: 2022 PMID: 35800379 PMCID: PMC9255254 DOI: 10.20517/cdr.2022.10
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Drug Resist ISSN: 2578-532X
Figure 1Acquired HER2 alterations in patients with endocrine resistance. The location of HER2 alterations identified by sequencing metastatic biopsies is depicted along the length of the protein. Protein domains are indicated by colour coding. Evolutionary classification for alterations: red triangles, acquired alterations; blue triangles, alterations shared with primary tumour; grey triangles, indeterminate or unknown. Figure 1 and legend used from Nayar et al.[.
Figure 2A schematic diagram showing resistance mechanisms driven by upregulation of ERBB4 and CDK6 amplification (red circle signifies amplification) or alternative signalling via FGFR2/RTK’s and JNK signal transduction. Figure used from Griffiths et al.[.
Figure 3Schematic representation of RAS-mediated TORC1 activation by both PI3K and MAPK pathways. Figure used from Sudhan et al.[.
Figure 4A: Shows MCF10A cells stably expressing the indicated genes were grown in 3D Matrigel in EGF/insulin-free medium + 1% charcoal/dextran-stripped serum (CSS) treated with vehicle [dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO)], 20 nM neratinib, 1 mM alpelisib, or the combination. Scale bars, 250 µm. B: Shows the number of colonies with invasive branching per field of view (FOV) from (B) was quantified. Data represent the average ± SD (n = 3). Figure and legend used from Hanker et al.[.
Summary of breast cancer resistance mechanisms and molecular vulnerabilities identified as potential therapeutic targets
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| Activated | Hyperphosphorylation of both ERK and AKT | Metastatic breast cancer | [ |
| Activated JNK activated | Increased ERBB4 signalling, oestrogen signalling loss, and responsive states | Early breast cancers | [ |
| Hyperactivated TORC1 | PI3K and MAPK pathways | [ | |
| Co-mutations in | Activation of HER2/HER3 and PI3K/AKT | [ | |
| HER2 low positive | Varying frequencies of | HER2 negative tumour | [ |
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| Advanced tumour with hormonal therapy | [ |
| Variants of unknown significance driven resistance | Frameshift nonsense (FS/NS) mutations in | Oestrogen receptor-positive breast cancer | [ |
| KDM5 driven resistance | Higher KDM5B expression | Breast cancer cell lines | [ |