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1.
Cell Commun Signal ; 20(1): 4, 2022 01 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34998412

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Research is revealing the complex coordination between cell signaling systems as they adapt to genetic and epigenetic changes. Tools to uncover these highly complex functional linkages will play an important role in advancing more efficacious disease treatments. Current tumor cell signal transduction research is identifying coordination between receptor types, receptor families, and transduction pathways to maintain tumor cell viability despite challenging tumor microenvironment conditions. METHODS: In this report, coactivated abnormal levels of signaling activity for c-Met and HER family receptors in live tumor cells were measured by a new clinical test to identify a subpopulation of breast cancer patients that could be responsive to combined targeted therapies. The CELsignia Multi-Pathway Signaling Function (CELsignia) Test uses an impedance biosensor to quantify an individual patient's ex vivo live tumor cell signaling response in real-time to specific HER family and c-Met co-stimulation and targeted therapies. RESULTS: The test identified breast tumors with hyperactive HER1, HER2, HER3/4, and c-Met coordinated signaling that express otherwise normal amounts of these receptors. The supporting data of the pre-clinical verification of this test included analyses of 79 breast cancer patients' cell response to HER and c-Met agonists. The signaling results were confirmed using clinically approved matching targeted drugs, and combinations of targeted drugs in addition to correlative mouse xenograft tumor response to HER and c-Met targeted therapies. CONCLUSIONS: The results of this study demonstrated the potential benefit of a functional test for identifying a subpopulation of breast cancer patients with coordinated abnormal HER and c-Met signaling for a clinical trial testing combination targeted therapy. Video Abstract.


Subject(s)
Breast Neoplasms , Animals , Breast Neoplasms/pathology , Cell Line, Tumor , Female , Humans , Mice , Receptor, ErbB-2/metabolism , Signal Transduction , Tumor Microenvironment
2.
J Cancer Res Clin Oncol ; 146(3): 605-619, 2020 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32036454

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: HER2 signaling functional activity may be important to measure in addition to HER2 protein quantification when identifying patients eligible for HER2 therapies. A HER2 Signaling Function (CELx HSF) Test for HER2-negative patients uses patient's live tumor cells on a biosensor to identify patients with abnormally high HER2-related signaling (HSFs+) likely to respond to anti-HER2 therapies. METHODS: The CELx HSF test was employed to: (1) characterize the sensitivity and specificity of the test to detect abnormal levels of HER2 signaling; (2) evaluate the inhibitory effectiveness of five different anti-HER2 therapies; (3) assess the correlation between CELx HSF test detection of abnormal HER2 signaling and response to HER2 therapy using xenograft models; and (4) confirm the prevalence of abnormal HER2 signaling amongst HER2-negative breast cancer patients (HER2-/HSFs+). RESULTS: HER2-/HSFs+ breast cancer patient samples were identified and showed sensitivity to five approved anti-HER2 therapies. Xenograft studies using both HER2+ and HER2- cell lines confirmed that CELx HER2 signaling status better predicts HER2 inhibitor efficacy than HER2 receptor status. In a study of 114 HER2-negative breast tumor patient samples, 27 (23.7%; 95% CI = 17-32%) had abnormal HER2 signaling (HSFs+). A ROC curve constructed with this dataset projects the CELx HSF Test would have greater than 90% sensitivity and specificity to detect the HER2-/HSFs+ patient population. CONCLUSIONS: The CELx HSF test is a well-characterized functional biomarker assay capable of identifying dynamic HER2-driven signaling dysfunction in tumor cells from HER2-negative breast cancer patients. This test has demonstrated efficacy of various HER2 targeted therapies in live tumor cells from the HSFs+ population and correlated the test result to HER2 drug response in mouse xenograft studies. The proportion of HER2-negative breast cancer patients found to have abnormal HER2 signaling in a 114 patient sample study, 20-25%, is significant. A clinical trial to evaluate the efficacy of anti-HER2 therapies in this patient population is warranted.


Subject(s)
Biomarkers, Tumor/analysis , Breast Neoplasms/metabolism , Receptor, ErbB-2/metabolism , Signal Transduction/physiology , Animals , Antineoplastic Agents/pharmacology , Electric Impedance , Female , Humans , Mice , Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays
3.
BMC Cancer ; 17(1): 199, 2017 03 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28302091

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Approximately 18-20% of all human breast cancers have overexpressed human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2). Standard clinical practice is to treat only overexpressed HER2 (HER2+) cancers with targeted anti-HER2 therapies. However, recent analyses of clinical trial data have found evidence that HER2-targeted therapies may benefit a sub-group of breast cancer patients with non-overexpressed HER2. This suggests that measurement of other biological factors associated with HER2 cancer, such as HER2 signaling pathway activity, should be considered as an alternative means of identifying patients eligible for HER2 therapies. METHODS: A new biosensor-based test (CELxTM HSF) that measures HER2 signaling activity in live cells is demonstrated using a set of 19 human HER2+ and HER2- breast cancer reference cell lines and primary cell samples derived from two fresh patient tumor specimens. Pathway signaling is elucidated by use of highly specific agonists and antagonists. The test method relies upon well-established phenotypic, adhesion-related, impedance changes detected by the biosensor. RESULTS: The analytical sensitivity and analyte specificity of this method was demonstrated using ligands with high affinity and specificity for HER1 and HER3. The HER2-driven signaling quantified ranged 50-fold between the lowest and highest cell lines. The HER2+ cell lines were almost equally divided into high and low signaling test result groups, suggesting that little correlation exists between HER2 protein expression and HER2 signaling level. Unexpectedly, the highest HER2-driven signaling level recorded was with a HER2- cell line. CONCLUSIONS: Measurement of HER2 signaling activity in the tumor cells of breast cancer patients is a feasible approach to explore as a biomarker to identify HER2-driven cancers not currently diagnosable with genomic techniques. The wide range of HER2-driven signaling levels measured suggests it may be possible to make a distinction between normal and abnormal levels of activity. Analytical validation studies and clinical trials treating HER2- patients with abnormal HER2-driven signaling would be required to evaluate the analytical and clinical validity of using this functional biomarker as a diagnostic test to select patients for treatment with HER2 targeted therapy. In clinical practice, this method would require patient specimens be delivered to and tested in a central lab.


Subject(s)
Biomarkers, Tumor/genetics , Breast Neoplasms/genetics , Drug Resistance, Neoplasm/genetics , Receptor, ErbB-2/isolation & purification , Biosensing Techniques , Breast Neoplasms/diagnosis , Breast Neoplasms/pathology , Female , Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic , Humans , MCF-7 Cells , Prognosis , Receptor, ErbB-2/genetics
4.
Oncotarget ; 7(48): 78577-78590, 2016 Nov 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27713176

ABSTRACT

The results of clinical trials evaluating the efficacy of HER2 inhibitors in patients with breast cancer indicate that the correlation between HER2 receptor levels and patient outcomes is as low as 50%. The relatively weak correlation between HER2 status and response to HER2-targeting drugs suggests that measurement of HER2 signaling activity, rather than absolute HER2 levels, may more accurately diagnose HER2-driven breast cancer. A new diagnostic test, the CELx HER2 Signaling Profile (CELx HSP) test, is demonstrated to measure real-time HER2 signaling function in live primary cells. In the present study, epithelial cells extracted fresh from breast cancer patient tumors classified as HER2 negative (HER2-, n = 34 of which 33 were estrogen receptor positive) and healthy subjects (n = 16) were evaluated along with reference breast cancer cell lines (n = 19). Live cell response to specific HER2 agonists (NRG1b and EGF) and antagonist (pertuzumab) was measured. Of the HER2- breast tumor cell samples tested, 7 of 34 patients (20.5%; 95% CI = 10%-37%) had HER2 signaling activity that was characterized as abnormally high. Amongst the tumor samples there was no correlation between HER2 protein status (by cell cytometry) and HER2 signaling activity (hyperactive or normal) (Regression analysis P = 0.144, R2 = 0.068). One conclusion is that measurement of HER2 signaling activity can identify a subset of breast cancers with normal HER2 receptor levels with abnormally high levels of HER2 signaling. This result constitutes a new subtype of breast cancer that should be considered for treatment with HER2 pathway inhibitors.


Subject(s)
Biosensing Techniques , Breast Neoplasms/metabolism , Cell Adhesion , Receptor, ErbB-2/deficiency , Signal Transduction , Adult , Aged , Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized/pharmacology , Antineoplastic Agents, Immunological/pharmacology , Breast Neoplasms/drug therapy , Breast Neoplasms/pathology , Case-Control Studies , Cell Adhesion/drug effects , Cell Line, Tumor , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Epidermal Growth Factor/pharmacology , Female , Humans , Middle Aged , Receptor, ErbB-2/agonists , Receptor, ErbB-2/antagonists & inhibitors , Receptors, Estrogen/metabolism , Receptors, Progesterone/metabolism , Reproducibility of Results , Signal Transduction/drug effects , Tumor Cells, Cultured
5.
Assay Drug Dev Technol ; 9(5): 532-48, 2011 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21438675

ABSTRACT

Optical microplate-based biosensors combine the advantages of label-free detection with industry-standard assay laboratory infrastructure and scalability. A plate-based label-free platform allows the same basic platform to be used to quantify molecular interactions of macromolecules and to screen and characterize drug-like small-molecule interactions. The ligand-binding domain of orphan estrogen-related nuclear receptor-γ (ERRγ) is utilized, as a model system of a challenging type of target, to illustrate the rapid development and utility of a range of biochemical assay formats on these biosensors. Formats in which either the domain, or a peptide derived from its cognate corepressor, RIP140, were immobilized were utilized. The direct binding of small drug molecules to the domain was characterized using immobilized domain. Subsequent addition of peptide distinguished whether compounds acted as either antagonists of peptide binding, or as agonists promoting a ternary complex. The format with peptide immobilized gave a more sensitive procedure for establishing the effect of compounds on the domain-peptide interaction. Using a direct-binding format, a diverse chemical library of 1,408 compounds in DMSO was screened for ability to bind to biosensors coated with ERRγ ligand-binding domain. Hits were then characterized using the other biosensor assay formats. The standard requirements for a full primary screening campaign were fulfilled by the acceptable hit-rate, quality-performance parameters, and throughput of the direct-binding assay format. Such a format allows direct screening of targets, such as orphan receptors, without the requirement for prior knowledge of a validated ligand.


Subject(s)
Biosensing Techniques/methods , Drug Evaluation, Preclinical/methods , Optical Phenomena , Receptors, Cytoplasmic and Nuclear/metabolism , Receptors, Estrogen/metabolism , Small Molecule Libraries/analysis , Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing/metabolism , Biotinylation , Cell Nucleus , Drug Discovery , Humans , Ligands , Macromolecular Substances , Models, Theoretical , Molecular Targeted Therapy , Nuclear Proteins/metabolism , Nuclear Receptor Interacting Protein 1 , Peptides/metabolism , Protein Binding , Reproducibility of Results , Small Molecule Libraries/metabolism , Stereoisomerism
6.
Expert Opin Drug Discov ; 3(8): 891-901, 2008 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23484966

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Adoption is accelerating for a new family of label-free optical biosensors incorporated into standard format microplates owing to their ability to enable highly sensitive detection of small molecules, proteins and cells for high-throughput drug discovery applications. OBJECTIVE: Label-free approaches are displacing other detection technologies owing to their ability to provide simple assay procedures for hit finding/validation, accessing difficult target classes, screening the interaction of cells with drugs and analyzing the affinity of small molecule inhibitors to target proteins. METHODS: This review describes several new drug discovery applications that are under development for microplate-based photonic crystal optical biosensors and the key issues that will drive adoption of the technology. RESULTS/CONCLUSIONS: Microplate-based optical biosensors are enabling a variety of cell-based assays, inhibition assays, protein-protein binding assays and protein-small molecule binding assays to be performed with high-throughput and high sensitivity.

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