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1.
Cancers (Basel) ; 15(24)2023 Dec 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38136350

RESUMO

The BRAF V600E mutation is frequently found in cancer. It activates the MAPK pathway and promotes cancer cell proliferation, making BRAF an excellent target for anti-cancer therapy. While BRAF-targeted therapy is highly effective for melanoma, it is often ineffective against other cancers harboring the BRAF mutation. In this study, we evaluate the effectiveness of a proteolysis targeting chimera (PROTAC), SJF-0628, in directing the degradation of mutated BRAF across a diverse panel of cancer cells and determine how these cells respond to the degradation. SJF-0628 treatment results in the degradation of BRAF V600E and a decrease in Mek activation in all cell lines tested, but the effects of the treatment on cell signaling and cell proliferation are cell-line-specific. First, BRAF degradation killed DU-4475 and Colo-205 cells via apoptosis but only partially inhibited the proliferation of other cancer cell lines. Second, SJF-0628 treatment resulted in co-degradation of MEK in Colo-205 cells but did not have the same effect in other cell lines. Finally, cell lines partially inhibited by BRAF degradation also contain other oncogenic drivers, making them multi-driver cancer cells. These results demonstrate the utility of a PROTAC to direct BRAF degradation and reveal that multi-driver oncogenesis renders some colorectal cancer cells resistant to BRAF-targeted treatment.

2.
Biomolecules ; 13(8)2023 08 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37627272

RESUMO

Triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) is a heterogeneous group of breast cancers characterized by their lack of estrogen receptors, progesterone receptors, and the HER2 receptor. They are more aggressive than other breast cancer subtypes, with a higher mean tumor size, higher tumor grade, the worst five-year overall survival, and the highest rates of recurrence and metastasis. Developing targeted therapies for TNBC has been a major challenge due to its heterogeneity, and its treatment still largely relies on surgery, radiation therapy, and chemotherapy. In this review article, we review the efforts in developing targeted therapies for TNBC, discuss insights gained from these efforts, and highlight potential opportunities going forward. Accumulating evidence supports TNBCs as multi-driver cancers, in which multiple oncogenic drivers promote cell proliferation and survival. In such multi-driver cancers, targeted therapies would require drug combinations that simultaneously block multiple oncogenic drivers. A strategy designed to generate mechanism-based combination targeted therapies for TNBC is discussed.


Assuntos
Neoplasias de Mama Triplo Negativas , Humanos , Neoplasias de Mama Triplo Negativas/tratamento farmacológico , Terapia Combinada , Proliferação de Células , Receptores de Estrogênio
3.
Cancers (Basel) ; 14(16)2022 Aug 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36011019

RESUMO

There are no signaling-based targeted therapies for triple-negative breast cancer. The development of targeted cancer therapy relies on identifying oncogenic signaling drivers, understanding their contributions to oncogenesis and developing inhibitors to block such drivers. In this study, we determine that DU-4475 is a mono-driver cancer cell line relying on BRAF and the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway for viability and proliferation. It is fully and lethally inhibited by BRAF or Mek inhibitors at low nM concentrations, but it is resistant to inhibitors targeting other signaling pathways. The inhibitory lethality caused by blocking Mek or BRAF is through apoptosis. In contrast, MDA-MB-231 is a multi-driver triple-negative breast cancer cell line dependent on both Src and the KRAS-activated mitogen-activated kinase pathway for proliferation and viability. Blocking each pathway alone only partially inhibits cell proliferation without killing them, but the combination of dasatinib, an Src inhibitor, and trametinib, a Mek inhibitor, achieves synthetic lethality. The combination is highly potent, with an IC50 of 8.2 nM each, and strikingly synergistic, with a combination index of less than 0.003 for 70% inhibition. The synthetic lethality of the drug combination is achieved by apoptosis. These results reveal a crucial difference between mono-driver and multi-driver cancer cells and suggest that pharmacological synthetic lethality may provide a basis for effectively inhibiting multi-driver cancers.

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