4.6 Article

The KRAS-regulated kinome identifies WEE1 and ERK coinhibition as a potential therapeutic strategy in KRAS-mutant pancreatic cancer

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 297, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbc.2021.101335

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health/National Cancer Institute (NCI) [CA42978, CA179193, CA175747, CA199235]
  2. Pancreatic Cancer Action Network-American Association for Cancer Research
  3. Department of Defense [W81XWH-15-1-0611]
  4. Lustgarten Pancreatic Cancer Foundation [388222]
  5. Slomo and Cindy Silvian Foundation
  6. NCI [T32CA071341, F30CA243253, T32CA009156, F32 CA239328, F31CA216965]
  7. American Cancer Society [PF-20-069]
  8. Debbie's Dream Foundation

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The study demonstrates that depletion of KRAS in KRAS-mutant pancreatic cancer leads to changes in a panel of kinases, with upregulation of certain kinases promoting cancer growth and downregulation of others playing a key role in KRAS-driven proliferation. Inhibition of upregulated kinases like DDR1 and WEE1 can effectively suppress PDAC growth. Additionally, concurrent inhibition of WEE1 and ERK results in potent growth suppression and enhanced apoptotic death compared to WEE1 inhibition alone.
Oncogenic KRAS drives cancer growth by activating diverse signaling networks, not all of which have been fully delineated. We set out to establish a system-wide profile of the KRASregulated kinase signaling network (kinome) in KRAS-mutant pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). We knocked down KRAS expression in a panel of six cell lines and then applied multiplexed inhibitor bead/MS to monitor changes in kinase activity and/or expression. We hypothesized that depletion of KRAS would result in downregulation of kinases required for KRAS-mediated transformation and in upregulation of other kinases that could potentially compensate for the deleterious consequences of the loss of KRAS. We identified 15 upregulated and 13 downregulated kinases in common across the panel of cell lines. In agreement with our hypothesis, all 15 of the upregulated kinases have established roles as cancer drivers (e.g., SRC, TGF-beta 1, ILK), and pharmacological inhibition of one of these upregulated kinases, DDR1, suppressed PDAC growth. Interestingly, 11 of the 13 downregulated kinases have established driver roles in cell cycle progression, particularly in mitosis (e.g., WEE1, Aurora A, PLK1). Consistent with a crucial role for the downregulated kinases in promoting KRAS-driven proliferation, we found that pharmacological inhibition of WEE1 also suppressed PDAC growth. The unexpected paradoxical activation of ERK upon WEE1 inhibition led us to inhibit both WEE1 and ERK concurrently, which caused further potent growth suppression and enhanced apoptotic death compared with WEE1 inhibition alone. We conclude that system-wide delineation of the KRAS-regulated kinome can identify potential therapeutic targets for KRAS-mutant pancreatic cancer.

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