4.3 Article

Wild-type EGFR Is Stabilized by Direct Interaction with HSP90 in Cancer Cells and Tumors

Journal

NEOPLASIA
Volume 14, Issue 8, Pages 670-+

Publisher

NEOPLASIA PRESS
DOI: 10.1593/neo.12986

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Funding

  1. Michigan Institute for Clinical and Health Research [R01CA131290, P50 CADE97248]
  2. University of Michigan Cancer Center [5 P30 CA46592]
  3. James Stuart and Barbara Padnos Research Funds for Cancer Research
  4. NIDCD intramural program [ZIA-DC-000073]
  5. Alfred Taubman Scholarship

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The epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) has been targeted for inhibition using tyrosine kinase inhibitors and monoclonal antibodies, with improvement in outcome in subsets of patients with head and neck, lung, and colorectal carcinomas. We have previously found that EGFR stability plays a key role in cell survival after chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Heat shock protein 90 (HSP90) is known to stabilize mutant EGFR and ErbB2, but its role in cancers with wild-type (WT) WT-EGFR is unclear. In this report, we demonstrate that fully mature, membrane-bound WT-EGFR interacts with HSP90 independent of ErbB2. Further, the HSP90 inhibitors geldanamycin (GA) and AT13387 cause a decrease in WT-EGFR in cultured head and neck cancer cells. This decrease results from a significantly reduced half-life of WT-EGFR. WT-EGFR was also lost in head and neck xenograft specimens after treatment with AT13387 under conditions that inhibited tumor growth and prolonged survival of the mice. Our findings demonstrate that WT-EGFR is a client protein of HSP90 and that their interaction is critical for maintaining both the stability of the receptor as well as the growth of EGFR-dependent cancers. Furthermore, these findings support the search for specific agents that disrupt HSP90's ability to act as an EGFR chaperone.

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