Inhibition of autocrine HGF maturation overcomes cetuximab resistance in colorectal cancer

Author:

Jones Vivian Truong,Graves-Deal Ramona,Cao Zheng,Bogatcheva Galina,Ramirez Marisol A.,Harmych Sarah J.,Higginbotham James N.,Sharma Vineeta,Damalanka Vishnu C.,Wahoski Claudia C.,Joshi Neeraj,Irudayam Maria Johnson,Roland Joseph T.,Ayers Gregory D.,Liu Qi,Coffey Robert J.,Janetka James W.,Singh BhuminderORCID

Abstract

AbstractAlthough amplifications and mutations in receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) act as bona fide oncogenes, in most cancers, RTKs maintain moderate expression and remain wild-type. Consequently, cognate ligands control many facets of tumorigenesis, including resistance to anti-RTK therapies. Herein, we show that the ligands for the RTKs MET and RON, HGF and HGFL, respectively, are synthesized as inactive precursors that are activated by cellular proteases. Our newly generated HGF/HGFL protease inhibitors could overcome both de novo and acquired cetuximab resistance in colorectal cancer (CRC). Conversely, HGF overexpression was necessary and sufficient to induce cetuximab resistance and loss of polarity. Moreover, HGF-induced cetuximab resistance could be overcome by the downstream MET inhibitor, crizotinib, and upstream protease inhibitors. Additionally, HAI-1, an endogenous inhibitor of HGF proteases, (i) was downregulated in CRC, (ii) exhibited increased genomic methylation that correlated with poor prognosis, (iii) HAI-1 expression correlated with cetuximab response in a panel of cancer cell lines, and (iv) exogenous addition of recombinant HAI-1 overcame cetuximab resistance in CC-HGF cells. Thus, we describe a targetable, autocrine HAI-1/Protease/HGF/MET axis in cetuximab resistance in CRC.

Funder

National Cancer Institute

American Cancer Society

National Institute of Health

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Cell Biology,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Pharmacology,Molecular Biology,Molecular Medicine

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