Litcius/Paper detail

Brain metastatic outgrowth and osimertinib resistance are potentiated by RhoA in EGFR-mutant lung cancer

Sally J. Adua, Anna Arnal Estape, Minghui Zhao, Bowen Qi, Zongzhi Liu, Carolyn Kravitz, Heather Hulme, Nicole Strittmatter, Francesc López‐Giráldez, Sampada Puranik, Alexandra E. Albert, Mary‐Ann Melnick, Bomiao Hu, Katerina Politi, Veronica Chiang, Nicola Colclough, Richard J. A. Goodwin, Darren A.E. Cross, Paul D. Smith, Don X. Nguyen

2022Nature Communications47 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The brain is a major sanctuary site for metastatic cancer cells that evade systemic therapies. Through pre-clinical pharmacological, biological, and molecular studies, we characterize the functional link between drug resistance and central nervous system (CNS) relapse in Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor- (EGFR-) mutant non-small cell lung cancer, which can progress in the brain when treated with the CNS-penetrant EGFR inhibitor osimertinib. Despite widespread osimertinib distribution in vivo, the brain microvascular tumor microenvironment (TME) is associated with the persistence of malignant cell sub-populations, which are poised to proliferate in the brain as osimertinib-resistant lesions over time. Cellular and molecular features of this poised state are regulated through a Ras homolog family member A (RhoA) and Serum Responsive Factor (SRF) gene expression program. RhoA potentiates the outgrowth of disseminated tumor cells on osimertinib treatment, preferentially in response to extracellular laminin and in the brain. Thus, we identify pre-existing and adaptive features of metastatic and drug-resistant cancer cells, which are enhanced by RhoA/SRF signaling and the brain TME during the evolution of osimertinib-resistant disease.

Topics & Concepts

OsimertinibRHOACancer researchEpidermal growth factor receptorLung cancerMetastasisBiologyCancerBrain metastasisMedicineSignal transductionPathologyErlotinibCell biologyInternal medicineLung Cancer Treatments and MutationsPI3K/AKT/mTOR signaling in cancerLung Cancer Research Studies