AI Article Synopsis

  • Gastric cancer (GC) has low survival rates and limited treatment options, often associated with mutations in the ARID1A gene, prompting the exploration of novel therapies.
  • Researchers screened 551 kinase inhibitors and found AZD5363 (an AKT inhibitor) to be the most effective in targeting ARID1A-deficient cancer cells by inducing synthetic lethality.
  • The mechanism involves AZD5363 causing pyroptotic cell death through the Caspase-3/GSDME pathway while also revealing that ARID1A normally represses AKT expression, explaining its increased activity in deficient cells.

Article Abstract

Background: Gastric cancer (GC) is a deadly disease with poor overall survival and limited therapeutic options. Genetic alterations such as mutations and/or deletions in chromatin remodeling gene AT-rich interactive domain 1 A (ARID1A) occur frequently in GC. Although ARID1A mutations/deletions are not a druggable target for conventional treatments, novel therapeutic strategies based on a synthetic lethal approach may be effective for the treatment of ARID1A-deficient cancers.

Methods: A kinase inhibitor library containing 551 compounds was screened in ARID1A isogenic GC cells for the ability to induce synthetic lethality effect. Selected hits' activity was validated, and the mechanism of the most potent candidate drug, AKT inhibitor AD5363 (capivasertib), on induction of the synthetic lethality with ARID1A deficiency was investigated.

Results: After robust vulnerability screening of 551 diverse protein kinase inhibitors, we identified the AKT inhibitor AZD5363 as being the most potent lead compound in inhibiting viability of ARID1A cells. A synthetic lethality between loss of ARID1A expression and AKT inhibition by AZD5363 was validated in both GC cell model system and xenograft model. Mechanistically, AZD5363 treatment induced pyroptotic cell death in ARID1A-deficient GC cells through activation of the Caspase-3/GSDME pathway. Furthermore, ARID1A occupied the AKT gene promoter and regulated its transcription negatively, thus the GC cells deficient in ARID1A showed increased expression and phosphorylation of AKT.

Conclusions: Our study demonstrates a novel synthetic lethality interaction and unique mechanism between ARID1A loss and AKT inhibition, which may provide a therapeutic and mechanistic rationale for targeted therapy on patients with ARID1A-defective GC who are most likely to be beneficial to AZD5363 treatment.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11405682PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41416-024-02778-5DOI Listing

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