Intratumoral heterogeneity contributes to cancer drug resistance, but the underlying mechanisms are not understood. Single-cell analyses of patient-derived models and clinical samples from glioblastoma patients treated with epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) demonstrate that tumor cells reversibly up-regulate or suppress mutant EGFR expression, conferring distinct cellular phenotypes to reach an optimal equilibrium for growth. Resistance to EGFR TKIs is shown to occur by elimination of mutant EGFR from extrachromosomal DNA. After drug withdrawal, reemergence of clonal EGFR mutations on extrachromosomal DNA follows. These results indicate a highly specific, dynamic, and adaptive route by which cancers can evade therapies that target oncogenes maintained on extrachromosomal DNA.
A widespread approach to modern cancer therapy is to identify a single oncogenic driver gene and target its mutant protein product (e.g. EGFR inhibitor treatment in EGFR-mutant lung cancers). However, genetically-driven resistance to targeted therapy limits patient survival. Through genomic analysis of 1122 EGFR-mutant lung cancer cell-free DNA samples and whole exome analysis of seven longitudinally collected tumor samples from an EGFR-mutant lung cancer patient, we identify critical co-occurring oncogenic events present in most advanced-stage EGFR-mutant lung cancers. We define new pathways limiting EGFR inhibitor response, including WNT/β-catenin and cell cycle gene (e.g. CDK4, CDK6) alterations. Tumor genomic complexity increases with EGFR inhibitor treatment and co-occurring alterations in CTNNB1, and PIK3CA exhibit non-redundant functions that cooperatively promote tumor metastasis or limit EGFR inhibitor response. This study challenges the prevailing single-gene driver oncogene view and links clinical outcomes to co-occurring genetic alterations in advanced-stage EGFR-mutant lung cancer patients.
Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most common malignant primary brain tumor of adults and one of the most lethal of all cancers. EGFR mutations (EGFRvIII) and PI3K hyperactivation are common in GBM, promoting tumor growth and survival, including through SREBP-1-dependent-lipogenesis. The role of cholesterol metabolism in GBM pathogenesis, its association with EGFR/PI3K signaling, and its potential therapeutic targetability are unknown. Here, studies in GBM cell lines, xenograft models and GBM clinical samples, including from patients treated with the EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitor lapatinib, uncovered an EGFRvIII-activated, PI3K/SREBP-1-dependent tumor survival pathway through the LDL receptor. Targeting LDLR with the Liver X Receptor (LXR) agonist GW3965 caused IDOL (Inducible Degrader Of LDLR)-mediated LDLR degradation and increased expression of the ABCA1 cholesterol efflux transporter, potently promoting tumor cell death in an in vivo GBM model. These results demonstrate that EGFRvIII can promote tumor survival through PI3K-SREBP-1 dependent up-regulation of LDLR, and suggest a role for LXR agonists in the treatment of GBM patients.
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