Department of Genomic Medicine, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas; Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Osaka General Medical Center, Osaka, Japan.
Department of Genomic Medicine, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas; Translational Research to Advance Therapeutics and Innovation in Oncology (TRACTION) platform, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas.
Gastroenterology. 2021 Jul;161(1):196-210. doi: 10.1053/j.gastro.2021.03.022. Epub 2021 Mar 19.
BACKGROUND & AIMS: Understanding the mechanisms by which tumors adapt to therapy is critical for developing effective combination therapeutic approaches to improve clinical outcomes for patients with cancer.
To identify promising and clinically actionable targets for managing colorectal cancer (CRC), we conducted a patient-centered functional genomics platform that includes approximately 200 genes and paired this with a high-throughput drug screen that includes 262 compounds in four patient-derived xenografts (PDXs) from patients with CRC.
Both screening methods identified exportin 1 (XPO1) inhibitors as drivers of DNA damage-induced lethality in CRC. Molecular characterization of the cellular response to XPO1 inhibition uncovered an adaptive mechanism that limited the duration of response in TP53-mutated, but not in TP53-wild-type CRC models. Comprehensive proteomic and transcriptomic characterization revealed that the ATM/ATR-CHK1/2 axes were selectively engaged in TP53-mutant CRC cells upon XPO1 inhibitor treatment and that this response was required for adapting to therapy and escaping cell death. Administration of KPT-8602, an XPO1 inhibitor, followed by AZD-6738, an ATR inhibitor, resulted in dramatic antitumor effects and prolonged survival in TP53-mutant models of CRC.
Our findings anticipate tremendous therapeutic benefit and support the further evaluation of XPO1 inhibitors, especially in combination with DNA damage checkpoint inhibitors, to elicit an enduring clinical response in patients with CRC harboring TP53 mutations.
了解肿瘤适应治疗的机制对于开发有效的联合治疗方法以改善癌症患者的临床结局至关重要。
为了确定管理结直肠癌(CRC)的有前途且具有临床可操作性的靶点,我们开展了一项以患者为中心的功能基因组学平台研究,其中包括大约 200 个基因,并将其与包括来自 4 名 CRC 患者的 4 个患者来源异种移植(PDX)中的 262 种化合物的高通量药物筛选相配对。
两种筛选方法均将 exportin 1(XPO1)抑制剂鉴定为诱导 CRC 中 DNA 损伤致死的驱动因素。对 XPO1 抑制作用下细胞反应的分子特征分析揭示了一种适应性机制,该机制限制了 TP53 突变型而非 TP53 野生型 CRC 模型的反应持续时间。全面的蛋白质组学和转录组学特征分析表明,在 XPO1 抑制剂处理后,ATM/ATR-CHK1/2 轴在 TP53 突变型 CRC 细胞中被选择性激活,而这种反应对于适应治疗和逃避细胞死亡是必需的。XPO1 抑制剂 KPT-8602 与 ATR 抑制剂 AZD-6738 联合给药可导致 CRC 的 TP53 突变模型中的肿瘤显著缩小并延长生存时间。
我们的研究结果预示着巨大的治疗益处,并支持进一步评估 XPO1 抑制剂,特别是与 DNA 损伤检查点抑制剂联合使用,以在携带 TP53 突变的 CRC 患者中引发持久的临床反应。