Unraveling the Mechanisms of Sensitivity to Anti-FGF Therapies in Imatinib-Resistant Gastrointestinal Stromal Tumors (GIST) Lacking Secondary KIT Mutations

Author:

Boichuk Sergei1234ORCID,Dunaev Pavel1,Skripova Vera4ORCID,Galembikova Aigul1ORCID,Bikinieva Firyuza1ORCID,Shagimardanova Elena567ORCID,Gazizova Guzel5,Deviatiiarov Ruslan56ORCID,Valeeva Elena3,Mikheeva Ekaterina1,Vasilyeva Maria8,Kopnin Pavel8ORCID,Strelnikov Vladimir9ORCID,Kiyamova Ramziya4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pathology, Kazan State Medical University, Kazan 420012, Russia

2. Department of Radiotherapy and Radiology, Russian Medical Academy of Continuous Professional Education, Moscow 127051, Russia

3. Central Research Laboratory, Kazan State Medical University, Kazan 420012, Russia

4. Biomarker Research Laboratory, Institute of Fundamental Medicine and Biology, Kazan Federal University, Kazan 420008, Russia

5. Regulatory Genomics Research Center, Institute of Fundamental Medicine and Biology, Kazan Federal University, Kazan 420008, Russia

6. LIFT—Life Improvement by Future Technologies Institute, Moscow 121205, Russia

7. Loginov Moscow Clinical Scientific Center, Moscow 111123, Russia

8. Cytogenetics Laboratory, Carcinogenesis Institute, N.N. Blokhin National Medical Research Center of Oncology, Moscow 115478, Russia

9. Epigenetics Laboratory, Research Centre for Medical Genetics, Moscow 115522, Russia

Abstract

We showed previously that inhibition of KIT signaling in GISTs activates FGFR-signaling pathway rendering cancer cells resistant to receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor (RTKi) imatinib mesylate (IM) (Gleevec) despite of absence of secondary KIT mutations and thereby illustrating a rationale for the combined (e.g., KIT- and FGFR-targeted) therapies. We show here that long-term culture of IM-resistant GISTs (GIST-R1) with IM substantially down-regulates KIT expression and induces activation of the FGFR-signaling cascade, evidenced by increased expression of total and phosphorylated forms of FGFR1 and 2, FGF-2, and FRS-2, the well-known adaptor protein of the FGF-signaling cascade. This resulted in activation of both AKT- and MAPK-signaling pathways shown on mRNA and protein levels, and rendered cancer cells highly sensitive to pan-FGFR-inhibitors (BGJ 398, AZD 4547, and TAS-120). Indeed, we observed a significant decrease of IC50 values for BGJ 398 in the GIST subclone (GIST-R2) derived from GIST-R1 cells continuously treated with IM for up to 12 months. An increased sensitivity of GIST-R2 cells to FGFR inhibition was also revealed on the xenograft models, illustrating a substantial (>70%) decrease in tumor size in BGJ 398-treated animals when treated with this pan-FGFR inhibitor. Similarly, an increased intra-tumoral apoptosis as detected by immunohistochemical (IHC)-staining for cleaved caspase-3 on day 5 of the treatment was found. As expected, both BGJ 398 and IM used alone lacked the pro-apoptotic and growth-inhibitory activities on GIST-R1 xenografts, thereby revealing their resistance to these TKis when used alone. Important, the knockdown of FGFR2, and, in much less content, FGF-2, abrogated BGJ 398′s activity against GIST-R2 cells both in vitro and in vivo, thereby illustrating the FGF-2/FGFR2-signaling axis in IM-resistant GISTs as a primary molecular target for this RTKi. Collectively, our data illustrates that continuous inhibition of KIT signaling in IM-resistant GISTs lacking secondary KIT mutations induced clonal heterogeneity of GISTs and resulted in accumulation of cancer cells with overexpressed FGF-2 and FGFR1/2, thereby leading to activation of FGFR-signaling. This in turn rendered these cells extremely sensitive to the pan-FGFR inhibitors used in combination with IM, or even alone, and suggests a rationale to re-evaluate the effectiveness of FGFR-inhibitors in order to improve the second-line therapeutic strategies for selected subgroups of GIST patients (e.g., IM-resistant GISTs lacking secondary KIT mutations and exhibiting the activation of the FGFR-signaling pathway).

Funder

Russian Science Foundation

Kazan Federal University of Ministry of Health of Russian Strategic Academic Leadership Program

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

Reference48 articles.

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