Dual MET–EGFR combinatorial inhibition against T790M-EGFR-mediated erlotinib-resistant lung cancer
Open Access
- 26 August 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in British Journal of Cancer
- Vol. 99 (6), 911-922
- https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjc.6604559
Abstract
Despite clinical approval of erlotinib, most advanced lung cancer patients are primary non-responders. Initial responders invariably develop secondary resistance, which can be accounted for by T790M-EGFR mutation in half of the relapses. We show that MET is highly expressed in lung cancer, often concomitantly with epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), including H1975 cell line. The erlotinib-resistant lung cancer cell line H1975, which expresses L858R/T790M-EGFR in-cis, was used to test for the effect of MET inhibition using the small molecule inhibitor SU11274. H1975 cells express wild-type MET, without genomic amplification (CNV=1.1). At 2 μM, SU11274 had significant in vitro pro-apoptotic effect in H1975 cells, 3.9-fold (P=0.0015) higher than erlotinib, but had no effect on the MET and EGFR-negative H520 cells. In vivo, SU11274 also induced significant tumour cytoreduction in H1975 murine xenografts in our bioluminescence molecular imaging assay. Using small-animal microPET/MRI, SU11274 treatment was found to induce an early tumour metabolic response in H1975 tumour xenografts. MET and EGFR pathways were found to exhibit collaborative signalling with receptor cross-activation, which had different patterns between wild type (A549) and L858R/T790M-EGFR (H1975). SU11274 plus erlotinib/CL-387,785 potentiated MET inhibition of downstream cell proliferative survival signalling. Knockdown studies in H1975 cells using siRNA against MET alone, EGFR alone, or both, confirmed the enhanced downstream inhibition with dual MET–EGFR signal path inhibition. Finally, in our time-lapse video-microscopy and in vivo multimodal molecular imaging studies, dual SU11274-erlotinib concurrent treatment effectively inhibited H1975 cells with enhanced abrogation of cytoskeletal functions and complete regression of the xenograft growth. Together, our results suggest that MET-based targeted inhibition using small-molecule MET inhibitor can be a potential treatment strategy for T790M-EGFR-mediated erlotinib-resistant non-small-cell lung cancer. Furthermore, optimised inhibition may be further achieved with MET inhibition in combination with erlotinib or an irreversible EGFR-TKI.Keywords
This publication has 47 references indexed in Scilit:
- Drug development of MET inhibitors: targeting oncogene addiction and expedienceNature Reviews Drug Discovery, 2008
- Amplification of MET may identify a subset of cancers with extreme sensitivity to the selective tyrosine kinase inhibitor PHA-665752Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- Somatic mutations of epidermal growth factor receptor signaling pathway in lung cancersInternational Journal of Cancer, 2006
- Gefitinib response of erlotinib-refractory lung cancer involving meninges—role of EGFR mutationNature Clinical Practice Oncology, 2006
- Inherited susceptibility to lung cancer may be associated with the T790M drug resistance mutation in EGFRNature Genetics, 2005
- An Alternative Inhibitor Overcomes Resistance Caused by a Mutation of the Epidermal Growth Factor ReceptorCancer Research, 2005
- A novel small molecule met inhibitor induces apoptosis in cells transformed by the oncogenic TPR-MET tyrosine kinase.2003
- Activation of Stat3 by receptor tyrosine kinases and cytokines regulates survival in human non-small cell carcinoma cellsOncogene, 2003
- c-Met: Structure, functions and potential for therapeutic inhibitionCancer and Metastasis Reviews, 2003
- Modulation of the c-Met/hepatocyte growth factor pathway in small cell lung cancer.2002