Molecular Targeted Therapies Elicit Concurrent Apoptotic and GSDME-Dependent Pyroptotic Tumor Cell Death.

Clin Cancer Res

State Key Laboratory of Oncogenes and Related Genes, Shanghai Cancer Institute, Ren Ji Hospital, School of Medicine, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai, China.

Published: December 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers found that targeted cancer therapies can trigger a type of cell death called pyroptosis, alongside regular apoptosis, which is important for effective treatment.
  • In experiments, small-molecule inhibitors that target lung cancer oncogenes like KRAS, EGFR, and ALK were shown to activate pyroptotic cell death, involving the protein gasdermin E (GSDME).
  • This study highlights pyroptosis as a significant mechanism in cancer drug response, suggesting it could influence how future cancer therapies are developed and applied.

Article Abstract

Purpose: The induced death signals following oncogene inhibition underlie clinical efficacy of molecular targeted therapies against human cancer, and defects of intact cell apoptosis machinery often lead to therapeutic failure. Despite potential importance, other forms of regulated cell death triggered by pharmacologic intervention have not been systematically characterized.

Experimental Design: Pyroptotic cell death was assessed by immunoblot analysis, phase-contrast imaging, scanning electron microscopy, and flow cytometry. Tumor tissues of patients with lung cancer were analyzed using IHC. Functional impact of pyroptosis on drug response was investigated in cell lines and xenograft models.

Results: We showed that diverse small-molecule inhibitors specifically targeting KRAS-, EGFR-, or ALK-driven lung cancer uniformly elicited robust pyroptotic cell death, in addition to simultaneously invoking cellular apoptosis. Upon drug treatment, the mitochondrial intrinsic apoptotic pathway was engaged and the mobilized caspase-3 protease cleaved and activated gasdermin E (GSDME, encoded by ), which permeabilized cytoplasmic membrane and executed cell-lytic pyroptosis. GSDME displayed ubiquitous expression in various lung cancer cell lines and clinical specimens, including -mutant, -altered, and -rearranged adenocarcinomas. As a result, cooccurrence and interplay of apoptosis and pyroptosis were widespread in lung cancer cells, succumbing to genotype-matched regimens. We further demonstrated that pyroptotic cell death partially contributed to the drug response in a subset of cancer models.

Conclusions: These results pinpoint GSDME-dependent pyroptosis as a previously unrecognized mechanism of action for molecular targeted agents to eradicate oncogene-addicted neoplastic cells, which may have important implications for the clinical development and optimal application of anticancer therapeutics.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-18-1478DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

cell death
20
lung cancer
16
molecular targeted
12
pyroptotic cell
12
targeted therapies
8
cell
8
drug response
8
cell lines
8
death
6
cancer
6

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!