已收录 273081 条政策
 政策提纲
  • 暂无提纲
A systems approach to uncovering the adaptive response of cancer to targeted therapies
[摘要] Tyrosine kinase inhibitors have significant promise in the fight to develop agents that can target cancer in a tumor-specific manner. A number of drugs have been and are currently in development to inhibit specific kinases that can mediate uncontrolled proliferation; however, an unfortunate eventuality for most patients receiving these treatments is the development of resistance that renders these drugs almost completely ineffective. While a number of mechanisms can evolve within a tumor to mitigate effects of kinase inhibitors, we sought to uncover what changes are occurring in the tyrosine phosphorylation network at both short timescales (minutes to 72 hours) and long timescales (120 hours+) that can be playing a role in helping a tumor become resistant to driver-kinase inhibition. It is our hypothesis that specific feedback networks are able to detect and overcome driver kinase inhibition through activation of potential other pathways, which can go on to mediate a longer term resistance phenotype. In order to probe dynamics in the tyrosine phosphorylation network, we employed mass spectrometry to analyze peptides derived from six non-small cell lung cancer cell lines that we classify as either EGFR+ or EML4-ALK+. From both mass spectrometry data and growth assays, we identified an unintuitive boost in signaling and growth in response to low inhibitor concentrations, suggestive of a cellular mechanism that is adaptive to driver kinase inhibition. Studies of EML4-ALK driven H3122 cells showed that this short-term response is not the same as the known long-term resistance mechanism to ALK inhibition, leading support to the notion that the short-term ;;adaptive response;; may be a novel type of mechanism to aid tumor adaptation to targeted therapies. In an effort to better probe signaling events occurring downstream of the phosphotyrosine network, a new pull down technique for mass spectrometry using 14-3-3 protein against phosphoserine and phosphothreonine peptides is described. The results of these studies open up many potential avenues for further exploration into the immediate and long-term signaling response of cancer to targeted therapies.
[发布日期]  [发布机构] Massachusetts Institute of Technology
[效力级别]  [学科分类] 
[关键词]  [时效性] 
   浏览次数:3      统一登录查看全文      激活码登录查看全文