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Widespread potential for growth-factor-driven resistance to anticancer kinase inhibitors
Authors:Timothy R Wilson  Jane Fridlyand  Yibing Yan  Elicia Penuel  Luciana Burton  Emily Chan  Jing Peng  Eva Lin  Yulei Wang  Jeff Sosman  Antoni Ribas  Jiang Li  John Moffat  Daniel P Sutherlin  Hartmut Koeppen  Mark Merchant  Richard Neve  Jeff Settleman
Affiliation:Research Oncology, Genentech Inc., 1 DNA Way, South San Francisco, California 94080, USA.
Abstract:Mutationally activated kinases define a clinically validated class of targets for cancer drug therapy. However, the efficacy of kinase inhibitors in patients whose tumours harbour such alleles is invariably limited by innate or acquired drug resistance. The identification of resistance mechanisms has revealed a recurrent theme—the engagement of survival signals redundant to those transduced by the targeted kinase. Cancer cells typically express multiple receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) that mediate signals that converge on common critical downstream cell-survival effectors—most notably, phosphatidylinositol-3-OH kinase (PI(3)K) and mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK). Consequently, an increase in RTK-ligand levels, through autocrine tumour-cell production, paracrine contribution from tumour stroma or systemic production, could confer resistance to inhibitors of an oncogenic kinase with a similar signalling output. Here, using a panel of kinase-'addicted' human cancer cell lines, we found that most cells can be rescued from drug sensitivity by simply exposing them to one or more RTK ligands. Among the findings with clinical implications was the observation that hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) confers resistance to the BRAF inhibitor PLX4032 (vemurafenib) in BRAF-mutant melanoma cells. These observations highlight the extensive redundancy of RTK-transduced signalling in cancer cells and the potentially broad role of widely expressed RTK ligands in innate and acquired resistance to drugs targeting oncogenic kinases.
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