Aim: While most patients with RET-altered cancer responded to the RET protein tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) pralsetinib (BLU667) and selpercatinib (LOXO292), few achieved a complete response. Heterogeneity in residual tumors makes it difficult to target their diverse genetic alterations individually. The aim of this study is to characterize the cancer cells that persist under continuous RET TKI treatment and identify the shared vulnerability of these cells.
Methods: We analyzed residual RET-altered cancer cells under prolonged RET TKI treatment by whole exome sequencing (WES), RNA-seq analysis, and drug-sensitivity screening. These were followed by tumor xenograft experiments of mono- and combinational drug treatments.
Results: BLU667- and LOXO292-tolerated persisters were cellularly heterogeneous, contained slowly proliferating cells, regained low levels of active ERK1/2, and displayed plasticity in growth rate, which we designated as in the transition state of resistance (TSR). TSR cells were genetically heterogeneous. Aurora A/B kinases were among the most significantly upregulated genes and that the MAPK pathway activity had significantly higher transcript footprints. MEK1/2 and Aurora kinase inhibitors were the most effective drugs when combined with a RET kinase inhibitor. In a TSR tumor model, combination of BLU667 with an Aurora kinase or a MEK1/2 kinase inhibitor caused TSR tumor regression.
Conclusion: Our experiments reveal that the heterogeneous TSR cancer cells under continuous RET TKI treatment converge on the targetable ERK1/2-driven Aurora A/B kinases. The discovery of the targetable convergent point in the genetically heterogeneous TSR points to an effective combination therapy approach to eliminate the residual tumors.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10149623 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.drup.2023.100958 | DOI Listing |
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