Cargando…

Genomic profiling is predictive of response to cisplatin treatment but not to PI3K inhibition in bladder cancer patient-derived xenografts

PURPOSE: Effective systemic therapeutic options are limited for bladder cancer. In this preclinical study we tested whether bladder cancer gene alterations may be predictive of treatment response. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: We performed genomic profiling of two bladder cancer patient derived tumor xenogra...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Wei, Lei, Chintala, Sreenivasulu, Ciamporcero, Eric, Ramakrishnan, Swathi, Elbanna, May, Wang, Jianmin, Hu, Qiang, Glenn, Sean T., Murakami, Mitsuko, Liu, Lu, Gomez, Eduardo Cortes, Sun, Yuchen, Conroy, Jacob, Miles, Kiersten Marie, Malathi, Kullappan, Ramaiah, Sudha, Anbarasu, Anand, Woloszynska-Read, Anna, Johnson, Candace S., Conroy, Jeffrey, Liu, Song, Morrison, Carl D., Pili, Roberto
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5363516/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27823983
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.13062
_version_ 1782517166812168192
author Wei, Lei
Chintala, Sreenivasulu
Ciamporcero, Eric
Ramakrishnan, Swathi
Elbanna, May
Wang, Jianmin
Hu, Qiang
Glenn, Sean T.
Murakami, Mitsuko
Liu, Lu
Gomez, Eduardo Cortes
Sun, Yuchen
Conroy, Jacob
Miles, Kiersten Marie
Malathi, Kullappan
Ramaiah, Sudha
Anbarasu, Anand
Woloszynska-Read, Anna
Johnson, Candace S.
Conroy, Jeffrey
Liu, Song
Morrison, Carl D.
Pili, Roberto
author_facet Wei, Lei
Chintala, Sreenivasulu
Ciamporcero, Eric
Ramakrishnan, Swathi
Elbanna, May
Wang, Jianmin
Hu, Qiang
Glenn, Sean T.
Murakami, Mitsuko
Liu, Lu
Gomez, Eduardo Cortes
Sun, Yuchen
Conroy, Jacob
Miles, Kiersten Marie
Malathi, Kullappan
Ramaiah, Sudha
Anbarasu, Anand
Woloszynska-Read, Anna
Johnson, Candace S.
Conroy, Jeffrey
Liu, Song
Morrison, Carl D.
Pili, Roberto
author_sort Wei, Lei
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: Effective systemic therapeutic options are limited for bladder cancer. In this preclinical study we tested whether bladder cancer gene alterations may be predictive of treatment response. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: We performed genomic profiling of two bladder cancer patient derived tumor xenografts (PDX). We optimized the exome sequence analysis method to overcome the mouse genome interference. RESULTS: We identified a number of somatic mutations, mostly shared by the primary tumors and PDX. In particular, BLCAb001, which is less responsive to cisplatin than BLCAb002, carried non-sense mutations in several genes associated with cisplatin resistance, including MLH1, BRCA2, and CASP8. Furthermore, RNA-Seq analysis revealed the overexpression of cisplatin resistance associated genes such as SLC7A11, TLE4, and IL1A in BLCAb001. Two different PIK3CA mutations, E542K and E545K, were identified in BLCAb001 and BLCAb002, respectively. Thus, we tested whether the genomic profiling was predictive of response to a dual PI3K/mTOR targeting agent, LY3023414. Despite harboring similar PIK3CA mutations, BLCAb001 and BLCAb002 exhibited differential response, both in vitro and in vivo. Sustained target modulation was observed in the sensitive model BLCAb002 but not in BLCAb001, as well as decreased autophagy. Interestingly, computational modelling of mutant structures and affinity binding to PI3K revealed that E542K mutation was associated with weaker drug binding than E545K. CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that the presence of activating PIK3CA mutations may not necessarily predict in vivo treatment response to PI3K targeted therapies, while specific gene alterations may be predictive for cisplatin response in bladder cancer models and, potentially, in patients as well.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5363516
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2016
publisher Impact Journals LLC
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-53635162017-03-29 Genomic profiling is predictive of response to cisplatin treatment but not to PI3K inhibition in bladder cancer patient-derived xenografts Wei, Lei Chintala, Sreenivasulu Ciamporcero, Eric Ramakrishnan, Swathi Elbanna, May Wang, Jianmin Hu, Qiang Glenn, Sean T. Murakami, Mitsuko Liu, Lu Gomez, Eduardo Cortes Sun, Yuchen Conroy, Jacob Miles, Kiersten Marie Malathi, Kullappan Ramaiah, Sudha Anbarasu, Anand Woloszynska-Read, Anna Johnson, Candace S. Conroy, Jeffrey Liu, Song Morrison, Carl D. Pili, Roberto Oncotarget Priority Research Paper PURPOSE: Effective systemic therapeutic options are limited for bladder cancer. In this preclinical study we tested whether bladder cancer gene alterations may be predictive of treatment response. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: We performed genomic profiling of two bladder cancer patient derived tumor xenografts (PDX). We optimized the exome sequence analysis method to overcome the mouse genome interference. RESULTS: We identified a number of somatic mutations, mostly shared by the primary tumors and PDX. In particular, BLCAb001, which is less responsive to cisplatin than BLCAb002, carried non-sense mutations in several genes associated with cisplatin resistance, including MLH1, BRCA2, and CASP8. Furthermore, RNA-Seq analysis revealed the overexpression of cisplatin resistance associated genes such as SLC7A11, TLE4, and IL1A in BLCAb001. Two different PIK3CA mutations, E542K and E545K, were identified in BLCAb001 and BLCAb002, respectively. Thus, we tested whether the genomic profiling was predictive of response to a dual PI3K/mTOR targeting agent, LY3023414. Despite harboring similar PIK3CA mutations, BLCAb001 and BLCAb002 exhibited differential response, both in vitro and in vivo. Sustained target modulation was observed in the sensitive model BLCAb002 but not in BLCAb001, as well as decreased autophagy. Interestingly, computational modelling of mutant structures and affinity binding to PI3K revealed that E542K mutation was associated with weaker drug binding than E545K. CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that the presence of activating PIK3CA mutations may not necessarily predict in vivo treatment response to PI3K targeted therapies, while specific gene alterations may be predictive for cisplatin response in bladder cancer models and, potentially, in patients as well. Impact Journals LLC 2016-11-03 /pmc/articles/PMC5363516/ /pubmed/27823983 http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.13062 Text en Copyright: © 2016 Wei et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Priority Research Paper
Wei, Lei
Chintala, Sreenivasulu
Ciamporcero, Eric
Ramakrishnan, Swathi
Elbanna, May
Wang, Jianmin
Hu, Qiang
Glenn, Sean T.
Murakami, Mitsuko
Liu, Lu
Gomez, Eduardo Cortes
Sun, Yuchen
Conroy, Jacob
Miles, Kiersten Marie
Malathi, Kullappan
Ramaiah, Sudha
Anbarasu, Anand
Woloszynska-Read, Anna
Johnson, Candace S.
Conroy, Jeffrey
Liu, Song
Morrison, Carl D.
Pili, Roberto
Genomic profiling is predictive of response to cisplatin treatment but not to PI3K inhibition in bladder cancer patient-derived xenografts
title Genomic profiling is predictive of response to cisplatin treatment but not to PI3K inhibition in bladder cancer patient-derived xenografts
title_full Genomic profiling is predictive of response to cisplatin treatment but not to PI3K inhibition in bladder cancer patient-derived xenografts
title_fullStr Genomic profiling is predictive of response to cisplatin treatment but not to PI3K inhibition in bladder cancer patient-derived xenografts
title_full_unstemmed Genomic profiling is predictive of response to cisplatin treatment but not to PI3K inhibition in bladder cancer patient-derived xenografts
title_short Genomic profiling is predictive of response to cisplatin treatment but not to PI3K inhibition in bladder cancer patient-derived xenografts
title_sort genomic profiling is predictive of response to cisplatin treatment but not to pi3k inhibition in bladder cancer patient-derived xenografts
topic Priority Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5363516/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27823983
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.13062
work_keys_str_mv AT weilei genomicprofilingispredictiveofresponsetocisplatintreatmentbutnottopi3kinhibitioninbladdercancerpatientderivedxenografts
AT chintalasreenivasulu genomicprofilingispredictiveofresponsetocisplatintreatmentbutnottopi3kinhibitioninbladdercancerpatientderivedxenografts
AT ciamporceroeric genomicprofilingispredictiveofresponsetocisplatintreatmentbutnottopi3kinhibitioninbladdercancerpatientderivedxenografts
AT ramakrishnanswathi genomicprofilingispredictiveofresponsetocisplatintreatmentbutnottopi3kinhibitioninbladdercancerpatientderivedxenografts
AT elbannamay genomicprofilingispredictiveofresponsetocisplatintreatmentbutnottopi3kinhibitioninbladdercancerpatientderivedxenografts
AT wangjianmin genomicprofilingispredictiveofresponsetocisplatintreatmentbutnottopi3kinhibitioninbladdercancerpatientderivedxenografts
AT huqiang genomicprofilingispredictiveofresponsetocisplatintreatmentbutnottopi3kinhibitioninbladdercancerpatientderivedxenografts
AT glennseant genomicprofilingispredictiveofresponsetocisplatintreatmentbutnottopi3kinhibitioninbladdercancerpatientderivedxenografts
AT murakamimitsuko genomicprofilingispredictiveofresponsetocisplatintreatmentbutnottopi3kinhibitioninbladdercancerpatientderivedxenografts
AT liulu genomicprofilingispredictiveofresponsetocisplatintreatmentbutnottopi3kinhibitioninbladdercancerpatientderivedxenografts
AT gomezeduardocortes genomicprofilingispredictiveofresponsetocisplatintreatmentbutnottopi3kinhibitioninbladdercancerpatientderivedxenografts
AT sunyuchen genomicprofilingispredictiveofresponsetocisplatintreatmentbutnottopi3kinhibitioninbladdercancerpatientderivedxenografts
AT conroyjacob genomicprofilingispredictiveofresponsetocisplatintreatmentbutnottopi3kinhibitioninbladdercancerpatientderivedxenografts
AT mileskierstenmarie genomicprofilingispredictiveofresponsetocisplatintreatmentbutnottopi3kinhibitioninbladdercancerpatientderivedxenografts
AT malathikullappan genomicprofilingispredictiveofresponsetocisplatintreatmentbutnottopi3kinhibitioninbladdercancerpatientderivedxenografts
AT ramaiahsudha genomicprofilingispredictiveofresponsetocisplatintreatmentbutnottopi3kinhibitioninbladdercancerpatientderivedxenografts
AT anbarasuanand genomicprofilingispredictiveofresponsetocisplatintreatmentbutnottopi3kinhibitioninbladdercancerpatientderivedxenografts
AT woloszynskareadanna genomicprofilingispredictiveofresponsetocisplatintreatmentbutnottopi3kinhibitioninbladdercancerpatientderivedxenografts
AT johnsoncandaces genomicprofilingispredictiveofresponsetocisplatintreatmentbutnottopi3kinhibitioninbladdercancerpatientderivedxenografts
AT conroyjeffrey genomicprofilingispredictiveofresponsetocisplatintreatmentbutnottopi3kinhibitioninbladdercancerpatientderivedxenografts
AT liusong genomicprofilingispredictiveofresponsetocisplatintreatmentbutnottopi3kinhibitioninbladdercancerpatientderivedxenografts
AT morrisoncarld genomicprofilingispredictiveofresponsetocisplatintreatmentbutnottopi3kinhibitioninbladdercancerpatientderivedxenografts
AT piliroberto genomicprofilingispredictiveofresponsetocisplatintreatmentbutnottopi3kinhibitioninbladdercancerpatientderivedxenografts