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MODL-19. DIPG HARBOUR ALTERATIONS TARGETABLE BY MEK INHIBITORS, WITH ACQUIRED RESISTANCE MECHANISMS OVERCOME BY COMBINATORIAL UP- OR DOWN-STREAM INHIBITION

The survival of children with DIPG remains dismal, with new treatments desperately needed. In the era of precision medicine, targeted therapies represent an exciting treatment opportunity, yet resistance can rapidly emerge, playing an important role in treatment failure. In a prospective biopsy-stra...

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Autores principales: Izquierdo, Elisa, Carvalho, Diana, Mackay, Alan, Temelso, Sara, Boult, Jessica K R, Molinari, Valeria, Stubbs, Mark, Depani, Sarita, O’Hare, Patricia, Robinson, Simon P, Hubank, Michael, Hargrave, Darren, Jones, Chris
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7715767/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/neuonc/noaa222.592
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author Izquierdo, Elisa
Carvalho, Diana
Mackay, Alan
Temelso, Sara
Boult, Jessica K R
Molinari, Valeria
Stubbs, Mark
Depani, Sarita
O’Hare, Patricia
Robinson, Simon P
Hubank, Michael
Hargrave, Darren
Jones, Chris
author_facet Izquierdo, Elisa
Carvalho, Diana
Mackay, Alan
Temelso, Sara
Boult, Jessica K R
Molinari, Valeria
Stubbs, Mark
Depani, Sarita
O’Hare, Patricia
Robinson, Simon P
Hubank, Michael
Hargrave, Darren
Jones, Chris
author_sort Izquierdo, Elisa
collection PubMed
description The survival of children with DIPG remains dismal, with new treatments desperately needed. In the era of precision medicine, targeted therapies represent an exciting treatment opportunity, yet resistance can rapidly emerge, playing an important role in treatment failure. In a prospective biopsy-stratified clinical trial (BIOMEDE), we combined detailed molecular profiling (methylation BeadArray, exome, RNAseq, phospho-proteomics) linked to drug screening in newly-established patient-derived models of DIPG in vitro and in vivo. We identified a high degree of in vitro sensitivity to the MEK inhibitor trametinib (GI50 16-50nM) in samples which harboured genetic alterations targeting the MAPK pathway, including the non-canonical BRAF_G469V mutation, and those affecting PIK3R1. Treatment of PDX models and the patient with trametinib at relapse, however, failed to elicit a significant response. We generated trametinib-resistant clones (62-188-fold, GI50 2.4–5.2µM) in the BRAF_G469V model through continuous drug exposure, and identified acquired mutations in MEK1/2 (MEK1_K57N, MEK1_I141S and MEK2_I115N) with sustained pathway up-regulation. These cells showed the hallmarks of mesenchymal transition, with overexpression of key proteins involved in invasion/migration, such as collagen-family proteins, integrins, MMPs and AHNAK2, amongst others. Resistant clones were conversely sensitive to the upstream receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor dasatinib (GI50 36-93nM), and combinations of trametinib with dasatinib and the downstream ERK inhibitor ulixertinib showed synergistic effects in vitro. These data highlight the MAPK pathway as a therapeutic target in DIPG, and show the importance of parallel resistance modelling and rational combinatorial treatments likely to be required for meaningful clinical translation.
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spelling pubmed-77157672020-12-09 MODL-19. DIPG HARBOUR ALTERATIONS TARGETABLE BY MEK INHIBITORS, WITH ACQUIRED RESISTANCE MECHANISMS OVERCOME BY COMBINATORIAL UP- OR DOWN-STREAM INHIBITION Izquierdo, Elisa Carvalho, Diana Mackay, Alan Temelso, Sara Boult, Jessica K R Molinari, Valeria Stubbs, Mark Depani, Sarita O’Hare, Patricia Robinson, Simon P Hubank, Michael Hargrave, Darren Jones, Chris Neuro Oncol Preclinical Models/Experimental Therapy/Drug Discovery The survival of children with DIPG remains dismal, with new treatments desperately needed. In the era of precision medicine, targeted therapies represent an exciting treatment opportunity, yet resistance can rapidly emerge, playing an important role in treatment failure. In a prospective biopsy-stratified clinical trial (BIOMEDE), we combined detailed molecular profiling (methylation BeadArray, exome, RNAseq, phospho-proteomics) linked to drug screening in newly-established patient-derived models of DIPG in vitro and in vivo. We identified a high degree of in vitro sensitivity to the MEK inhibitor trametinib (GI50 16-50nM) in samples which harboured genetic alterations targeting the MAPK pathway, including the non-canonical BRAF_G469V mutation, and those affecting PIK3R1. Treatment of PDX models and the patient with trametinib at relapse, however, failed to elicit a significant response. We generated trametinib-resistant clones (62-188-fold, GI50 2.4–5.2µM) in the BRAF_G469V model through continuous drug exposure, and identified acquired mutations in MEK1/2 (MEK1_K57N, MEK1_I141S and MEK2_I115N) with sustained pathway up-regulation. These cells showed the hallmarks of mesenchymal transition, with overexpression of key proteins involved in invasion/migration, such as collagen-family proteins, integrins, MMPs and AHNAK2, amongst others. Resistant clones were conversely sensitive to the upstream receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor dasatinib (GI50 36-93nM), and combinations of trametinib with dasatinib and the downstream ERK inhibitor ulixertinib showed synergistic effects in vitro. These data highlight the MAPK pathway as a therapeutic target in DIPG, and show the importance of parallel resistance modelling and rational combinatorial treatments likely to be required for meaningful clinical translation. Oxford University Press 2020-12-04 /pmc/articles/PMC7715767/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/neuonc/noaa222.592 Text en © The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Neuro-Oncology. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Preclinical Models/Experimental Therapy/Drug Discovery
Izquierdo, Elisa
Carvalho, Diana
Mackay, Alan
Temelso, Sara
Boult, Jessica K R
Molinari, Valeria
Stubbs, Mark
Depani, Sarita
O’Hare, Patricia
Robinson, Simon P
Hubank, Michael
Hargrave, Darren
Jones, Chris
MODL-19. DIPG HARBOUR ALTERATIONS TARGETABLE BY MEK INHIBITORS, WITH ACQUIRED RESISTANCE MECHANISMS OVERCOME BY COMBINATORIAL UP- OR DOWN-STREAM INHIBITION
title MODL-19. DIPG HARBOUR ALTERATIONS TARGETABLE BY MEK INHIBITORS, WITH ACQUIRED RESISTANCE MECHANISMS OVERCOME BY COMBINATORIAL UP- OR DOWN-STREAM INHIBITION
title_full MODL-19. DIPG HARBOUR ALTERATIONS TARGETABLE BY MEK INHIBITORS, WITH ACQUIRED RESISTANCE MECHANISMS OVERCOME BY COMBINATORIAL UP- OR DOWN-STREAM INHIBITION
title_fullStr MODL-19. DIPG HARBOUR ALTERATIONS TARGETABLE BY MEK INHIBITORS, WITH ACQUIRED RESISTANCE MECHANISMS OVERCOME BY COMBINATORIAL UP- OR DOWN-STREAM INHIBITION
title_full_unstemmed MODL-19. DIPG HARBOUR ALTERATIONS TARGETABLE BY MEK INHIBITORS, WITH ACQUIRED RESISTANCE MECHANISMS OVERCOME BY COMBINATORIAL UP- OR DOWN-STREAM INHIBITION
title_short MODL-19. DIPG HARBOUR ALTERATIONS TARGETABLE BY MEK INHIBITORS, WITH ACQUIRED RESISTANCE MECHANISMS OVERCOME BY COMBINATORIAL UP- OR DOWN-STREAM INHIBITION
title_sort modl-19. dipg harbour alterations targetable by mek inhibitors, with acquired resistance mechanisms overcome by combinatorial up- or down-stream inhibition
topic Preclinical Models/Experimental Therapy/Drug Discovery
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7715767/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/neuonc/noaa222.592
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