C. L. V. D. Borden, Nina M. Koemans, B. Pan, Changjun Wang, D. Wolf, Jean-Philippe Coppé, L. Veer
{"title":"PR05:化疗耐药TNBC的激酶及靶向激酶的鉴定","authors":"C. L. V. D. Borden, Nina M. Koemans, B. Pan, Changjun Wang, D. Wolf, Jean-Philippe Coppé, L. Veer","doi":"10.1158/1557-3125.ADVBC17-PR05","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) accounts for around 15% of all breast cancer cases, with over 35,000 newly diagnosed women per year in the US. TNBC patients are at highest risk for recurrence, and neoadjuvant standard chemotherapy gives pathologic complete response in about 30% of these patients. Currently, no targeted therapy has been conclusively established to improve the outcome of TNBC patients, though successful phase II studies have been completed (1, 2). Therefore, identification of mechanisms that would be targetable is of great importance to improve the management of TNBC significantly. The aim of this study is to identify a unique set of hyperactivated kinases in chemotherapy-resistant TNBC cell lines that can potentially be targeted to achieve therapeutic response using a newly developed high-throughput kinase activity-mapping (HT-KAM) assay. The HT-KAM assay is our new screening technology to assess the catalytic activity of many kinases in parallel, which relies on collections of peptide probes that are used as combinatorial sensors to measure the phosphor-catalytic activity of kinases in large-scale high-throughput ATP-consumption assays (3). The HT-KAM system provides access to a new, untapped, and large resource of biologically meaningful measurements, both as a means to map the entire cancer kinome, and as a means to convert global phospho-signatures into functional patterns of kinase activity signatures. Kinome maps represent how kinase-signaling networks are rewired by drugs/targeted therapies in the context of different cellular backgrounds and exogenously mutated proteins/pathways, and provide insight into potentially targetable kinases. We previously established PhosphoAtlas, a heavily curated, comprehensive catalog database of 1,733 functionally interconnected proteins comprising the human phospho-reactome, including 4,748 unique edges that connect kinases to a target (776 kinase genes, 1,276 substrate protein genes, 2,492 heptameric peptide sequences [HPS]) (4). Here, we made a selection of 640 peptide sensors, capturing the functionality of >110 kinases over >900 kinase-substrate nodes directly relevant to tumor biology that represent the majority of the curated interconnected proteins, from our PhosphoAtlas (4). Earlier, the HT-KAM assay on 225 peptides was applied to explore mechanisms driving the unresponsiveness of colorectal and melanoma cancers to anti-BRAFV600E therapy in cell culture and patient-derived xenografts (PDX) (3). This successfully produced the predictive oncogenic kinome of melanoma tissues from patients suffering from fatal metastatic disease and, more importantly, identified new kinases/nodes that could be targeted to overcome drug resistance (3). In this study, we characterized the phospho-catalytic signatures of 10 TNBC cell lines (BT-549, HCC1143, HCC1395, HCC1937, HCC38, HCC70, HS578T, MDA-MB-231, MDA-MB-436, MDA-MB-468) across 640 peptides, either untreated or treated for 5 weeks with a chemotherapeutic drug (carboplatin, doxorubicin, 5-FU) at IC50 concentrations. For validation purposes of the anticipated phospho-signatures, we also assessed the catalytic activity of selected purified recombinant kinases. Based on preliminary data, we anticipate showing a comprehensive map of the oncogenic kinome of TNBC cell lines, enabling us to distinguish TNBC cell lines based on their origin and treatment. References: 1. Engebraaten O, Vollan HKM, Borresen-Dale A-L. Triple-negative breast cancer and the need for new therapeutic targets. Am J Pathol 2013;183(4):1064-74. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0002944013004616. 2. Rugo HS, Olopade OI, DeMichele A, et al. Adaptive randomization of veliparib-carboplatin treatment in breast cancer. N Engl J Med 2016;375:23-34. PMID: 27406347. 3. Coppe JP, Mori M, Pan B, et al. Functional detection of phospho-catalytic circuits identifies new vulnerabilities of cancer. Submitted. 4. Olow A, Chen Z, Niedner RH, et al. An atlas of the human kinome reveals the mutational landscape underlying dysregulated phosphorylation cascades in cancer. Cancer Res 2016;76:1733-45. PMID: 26921330. This abstract is also being presented as Poster B37. Citation Format: Carolien L. Van Der Borden, Nina M. Koemans, Bo Pan, Changjun Wang, Denise M. Wolf, Jean-Philippe Coppe, Laura J. Van ‘t Veer. The kinome of chemotherapy-resistant TNBC and identification of targetable kinases [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the AACR Special Conference: Advances in Breast Cancer Research; 2017 Oct 7-10; Hollywood, CA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Mol Cancer Res 2018;16(8_Suppl):Abstract nr PR05.","PeriodicalId":20897,"journal":{"name":"Resistance Mechanisms","volume":"45 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2018-08-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Abstract PR05: The kinome of chemotherapy-resistant TNBC and identification of targetable kinases\",\"authors\":\"C. L. V. D. Borden, Nina M. Koemans, B. Pan, Changjun Wang, D. Wolf, Jean-Philippe Coppé, L. Veer\",\"doi\":\"10.1158/1557-3125.ADVBC17-PR05\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) accounts for around 15% of all breast cancer cases, with over 35,000 newly diagnosed women per year in the US. TNBC patients are at highest risk for recurrence, and neoadjuvant standard chemotherapy gives pathologic complete response in about 30% of these patients. Currently, no targeted therapy has been conclusively established to improve the outcome of TNBC patients, though successful phase II studies have been completed (1, 2). Therefore, identification of mechanisms that would be targetable is of great importance to improve the management of TNBC significantly. The aim of this study is to identify a unique set of hyperactivated kinases in chemotherapy-resistant TNBC cell lines that can potentially be targeted to achieve therapeutic response using a newly developed high-throughput kinase activity-mapping (HT-KAM) assay. The HT-KAM assay is our new screening technology to assess the catalytic activity of many kinases in parallel, which relies on collections of peptide probes that are used as combinatorial sensors to measure the phosphor-catalytic activity of kinases in large-scale high-throughput ATP-consumption assays (3). The HT-KAM system provides access to a new, untapped, and large resource of biologically meaningful measurements, both as a means to map the entire cancer kinome, and as a means to convert global phospho-signatures into functional patterns of kinase activity signatures. Kinome maps represent how kinase-signaling networks are rewired by drugs/targeted therapies in the context of different cellular backgrounds and exogenously mutated proteins/pathways, and provide insight into potentially targetable kinases. We previously established PhosphoAtlas, a heavily curated, comprehensive catalog database of 1,733 functionally interconnected proteins comprising the human phospho-reactome, including 4,748 unique edges that connect kinases to a target (776 kinase genes, 1,276 substrate protein genes, 2,492 heptameric peptide sequences [HPS]) (4). Here, we made a selection of 640 peptide sensors, capturing the functionality of >110 kinases over >900 kinase-substrate nodes directly relevant to tumor biology that represent the majority of the curated interconnected proteins, from our PhosphoAtlas (4). Earlier, the HT-KAM assay on 225 peptides was applied to explore mechanisms driving the unresponsiveness of colorectal and melanoma cancers to anti-BRAFV600E therapy in cell culture and patient-derived xenografts (PDX) (3). This successfully produced the predictive oncogenic kinome of melanoma tissues from patients suffering from fatal metastatic disease and, more importantly, identified new kinases/nodes that could be targeted to overcome drug resistance (3). In this study, we characterized the phospho-catalytic signatures of 10 TNBC cell lines (BT-549, HCC1143, HCC1395, HCC1937, HCC38, HCC70, HS578T, MDA-MB-231, MDA-MB-436, MDA-MB-468) across 640 peptides, either untreated or treated for 5 weeks with a chemotherapeutic drug (carboplatin, doxorubicin, 5-FU) at IC50 concentrations. For validation purposes of the anticipated phospho-signatures, we also assessed the catalytic activity of selected purified recombinant kinases. Based on preliminary data, we anticipate showing a comprehensive map of the oncogenic kinome of TNBC cell lines, enabling us to distinguish TNBC cell lines based on their origin and treatment. References: 1. Engebraaten O, Vollan HKM, Borresen-Dale A-L. Triple-negative breast cancer and the need for new therapeutic targets. Am J Pathol 2013;183(4):1064-74. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0002944013004616. 2. Rugo HS, Olopade OI, DeMichele A, et al. Adaptive randomization of veliparib-carboplatin treatment in breast cancer. N Engl J Med 2016;375:23-34. PMID: 27406347. 3. Coppe JP, Mori M, Pan B, et al. Functional detection of phospho-catalytic circuits identifies new vulnerabilities of cancer. Submitted. 4. Olow A, Chen Z, Niedner RH, et al. An atlas of the human kinome reveals the mutational landscape underlying dysregulated phosphorylation cascades in cancer. Cancer Res 2016;76:1733-45. PMID: 26921330. This abstract is also being presented as Poster B37. Citation Format: Carolien L. Van Der Borden, Nina M. Koemans, Bo Pan, Changjun Wang, Denise M. Wolf, Jean-Philippe Coppe, Laura J. Van ‘t Veer. The kinome of chemotherapy-resistant TNBC and identification of targetable kinases [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the AACR Special Conference: Advances in Breast Cancer Research; 2017 Oct 7-10; Hollywood, CA. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
三阴性乳腺癌(TNBC)约占所有乳腺癌病例的15%,在美国每年有超过35,000名新诊断的女性。TNBC患者的复发风险最高,新辅助标准化疗在约30%的患者中获得病理完全缓解。目前,虽然已经完成了成功的II期研究,但还没有明确的靶向治疗方法来改善TNBC患者的预后(1,2)。因此,确定可靶向的机制对于显著改善TNBC的管理非常重要。本研究的目的是在化疗耐药的TNBC细胞系中鉴定一组独特的高活化激酶,这些激酶可以使用新开发的高通量激酶活性定位(HT-KAM)测定来潜在地靶向实现治疗反应。HT-KAM测定法是我们新的筛选技术,用于并行评估许多激酶的催化活性,它依赖于肽探针的集合,这些探针被用作组合传感器,用于在大规模高通量atp消耗测定中测量激酶的磷酸化催化活性(3)。HT-KAM系统提供了一种新的、未开发的、具有生物学意义的大量测量资源,既可以作为绘制整个癌症激酶组的手段,也可以作为绘制整个癌症激酶组的手段。作为一种将全局磷酸化信号转化为激酶活性信号的功能模式的手段。Kinome图谱代表了在不同细胞背景和外源突变蛋白/途径的背景下,药物/靶向治疗如何重新连接激酶信号网络,并提供了对潜在靶向激酶的见解。我们之前建立了PhosphoAtlas,这是一个精心策划的综合目录数据库,包含1,733个功能相互连接的蛋白质,包括人类磷酸化反应组,包括4,748个连接激酶和目标的独特边缘(776个激酶基因,1,276个底物蛋白基因,2,492个七聚体肽序列[HPS])(4)。在这里,我们选择了640个肽传感器。从我们的PhosphoAtlas(4)中,捕获了与肿瘤生物学直接相关的>110个激酶和>900个激酶-底物节点的功能,这些节点代表了大多数策划的相互连接蛋白。225个多肽的HT-KAM测定被用于探索导致结直肠癌和黑色素瘤癌症对细胞培养和患者来源的异种移植物(PDX)中的抗brafv600e治疗无反应的机制(3)。这成功地产生了来自致命转移性疾病患者的黑色素瘤组织的预测致癌激酶,更重要的是,确定了新的激酶/节点,可以靶向克服耐药性(3)。我们对10个TNBC细胞系(BT-549, HCC1143, HCC1395, HCC1937, HCC38, HCC70, HS578T, MDA-MB-231, MDA-MB-436, MDA-MB-468)在640个多肽上的磷酸化催化特征进行了表征,这些多肽在IC50浓度下未经治疗或使用化疗药物(卡铂,阿霉素,5- fu)治疗5周。为了验证预期的磷酸化特征,我们还评估了选定的纯化重组激酶的催化活性。基于初步数据,我们期望展示TNBC细胞系的致癌基因组的综合图谱,使我们能够根据其来源和治疗来区分TNBC细胞系。引用:1。Engebraaten O, Vollan HKM, Borresen-Dale A-L。三阴性乳腺癌和对新治疗靶点的需求。中华疾病杂志,2013;18(4):1064- 1074。http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0002944013004616。2. Rugo HS, Olopade OI, DeMichele A,等。维利帕利-卡铂治疗乳腺癌的适应性随机化。中华医学杂志,2016;37(5):391 - 391。PMID: 27406347。3.Coppe JP, Mori M, Pan B,等。磷酸催化回路的功能检测发现了癌症的新脆弱性。提交。4。陈忠,李建平,李建平,等。人类基因组图谱揭示了癌症中磷酸化失调级联反应的突变景观。巨蟹座杂志2016;76:1733-45。PMID: 26921330。此摘要也以海报B37的形式呈现。引文格式:Carolien L. Van Der Borden, Nina M. Koemans, Bo Pan, Changjun Wang, Denise M. Wolf, Jean-Philippe Coppe, Laura J. Van ' t Veer。化疗耐药TNBC的激酶及靶向激酶的鉴定[摘要]。摘自:AACR特别会议论文集:乳腺癌研究进展;2017年10月7-10日;费城(PA): AACR;中华肿瘤杂志,2018;16(8):摘要nr PR05。
Abstract PR05: The kinome of chemotherapy-resistant TNBC and identification of targetable kinases
Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) accounts for around 15% of all breast cancer cases, with over 35,000 newly diagnosed women per year in the US. TNBC patients are at highest risk for recurrence, and neoadjuvant standard chemotherapy gives pathologic complete response in about 30% of these patients. Currently, no targeted therapy has been conclusively established to improve the outcome of TNBC patients, though successful phase II studies have been completed (1, 2). Therefore, identification of mechanisms that would be targetable is of great importance to improve the management of TNBC significantly. The aim of this study is to identify a unique set of hyperactivated kinases in chemotherapy-resistant TNBC cell lines that can potentially be targeted to achieve therapeutic response using a newly developed high-throughput kinase activity-mapping (HT-KAM) assay. The HT-KAM assay is our new screening technology to assess the catalytic activity of many kinases in parallel, which relies on collections of peptide probes that are used as combinatorial sensors to measure the phosphor-catalytic activity of kinases in large-scale high-throughput ATP-consumption assays (3). The HT-KAM system provides access to a new, untapped, and large resource of biologically meaningful measurements, both as a means to map the entire cancer kinome, and as a means to convert global phospho-signatures into functional patterns of kinase activity signatures. Kinome maps represent how kinase-signaling networks are rewired by drugs/targeted therapies in the context of different cellular backgrounds and exogenously mutated proteins/pathways, and provide insight into potentially targetable kinases. We previously established PhosphoAtlas, a heavily curated, comprehensive catalog database of 1,733 functionally interconnected proteins comprising the human phospho-reactome, including 4,748 unique edges that connect kinases to a target (776 kinase genes, 1,276 substrate protein genes, 2,492 heptameric peptide sequences [HPS]) (4). Here, we made a selection of 640 peptide sensors, capturing the functionality of >110 kinases over >900 kinase-substrate nodes directly relevant to tumor biology that represent the majority of the curated interconnected proteins, from our PhosphoAtlas (4). Earlier, the HT-KAM assay on 225 peptides was applied to explore mechanisms driving the unresponsiveness of colorectal and melanoma cancers to anti-BRAFV600E therapy in cell culture and patient-derived xenografts (PDX) (3). This successfully produced the predictive oncogenic kinome of melanoma tissues from patients suffering from fatal metastatic disease and, more importantly, identified new kinases/nodes that could be targeted to overcome drug resistance (3). In this study, we characterized the phospho-catalytic signatures of 10 TNBC cell lines (BT-549, HCC1143, HCC1395, HCC1937, HCC38, HCC70, HS578T, MDA-MB-231, MDA-MB-436, MDA-MB-468) across 640 peptides, either untreated or treated for 5 weeks with a chemotherapeutic drug (carboplatin, doxorubicin, 5-FU) at IC50 concentrations. For validation purposes of the anticipated phospho-signatures, we also assessed the catalytic activity of selected purified recombinant kinases. Based on preliminary data, we anticipate showing a comprehensive map of the oncogenic kinome of TNBC cell lines, enabling us to distinguish TNBC cell lines based on their origin and treatment. References: 1. Engebraaten O, Vollan HKM, Borresen-Dale A-L. Triple-negative breast cancer and the need for new therapeutic targets. Am J Pathol 2013;183(4):1064-74. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0002944013004616. 2. Rugo HS, Olopade OI, DeMichele A, et al. Adaptive randomization of veliparib-carboplatin treatment in breast cancer. N Engl J Med 2016;375:23-34. PMID: 27406347. 3. Coppe JP, Mori M, Pan B, et al. Functional detection of phospho-catalytic circuits identifies new vulnerabilities of cancer. Submitted. 4. Olow A, Chen Z, Niedner RH, et al. An atlas of the human kinome reveals the mutational landscape underlying dysregulated phosphorylation cascades in cancer. Cancer Res 2016;76:1733-45. PMID: 26921330. This abstract is also being presented as Poster B37. Citation Format: Carolien L. Van Der Borden, Nina M. Koemans, Bo Pan, Changjun Wang, Denise M. Wolf, Jean-Philippe Coppe, Laura J. Van ‘t Veer. The kinome of chemotherapy-resistant TNBC and identification of targetable kinases [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the AACR Special Conference: Advances in Breast Cancer Research; 2017 Oct 7-10; Hollywood, CA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Mol Cancer Res 2018;16(8_Suppl):Abstract nr PR05.