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Hgf/Met activation mediates resistance to BRAF inhibition in murine anaplastic thyroid cancers
Jeffrey A. Knauf, … , Ronald Ghossein, James A. Fagin
Jeffrey A. Knauf, … , Ronald Ghossein, James A. Fagin
Published July 10, 2018
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2018;128(9):4086-4097. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI120966.
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Research Article Oncology

Hgf/Met activation mediates resistance to BRAF inhibition in murine anaplastic thyroid cancers

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Abstract

Anaplastic thyroid carcinomas (ATCs) have a high prevalence of BRAF and TP53 mutations. A trial of vemurafenib in nonmelanoma BRAFV600E-mutant cancers showed significant, although short-lived, responses in ATCs, indicating that these virulent tumors remain addicted to BRAF despite their high mutation burden. To explore the mechanisms mediating acquired resistance to BRAF blockade, we generated mice with thyroid-specific deletion of p53 and dox-dependent expression of BRAFV600E, 50% of which developed ATCs after dox treatment. Upon dox withdrawal there was complete regression in all mice, although recurrences were later detected in 85% of animals. The relapsed tumors had elevated MAPK transcriptional output, and retained responses to the MEK/RAF inhibitor CH5126766 in vivo and in vitro. Whole-exome sequencing identified recurrent focal amplifications of chromosome 6, with a minimal region of overlap that included Met. Met-amplified recurrences overexpressed the receptor as well as its ligand Hgf. Growth, signaling, and viability of Met-amplified tumor cells were suppressed in vitro and in vivo by the Met kinase inhibitors PF-04217903 and crizotinib, whereas primary ATCs and Met-diploid relapses were resistant. Hence, recurrences are the rule after BRAF suppression in murine ATCs, most commonly due to activation of HGF/MET signaling, which generates exquisite dependency to MET kinase inhibitors.

Authors

Jeffrey A. Knauf, Kathleen A. Luckett, Kuen-Yuan Chen, Francesca Voza, Nicholas D. Socci, Ronald Ghossein, James A. Fagin

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Figure 2

BRAFV600E-driven mouse ATCs are addicted to the oncoprotein, but frequently recur.

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BRAFV600E-driven mouse ATCs are addicted to the oncoprotein, but frequen...
(A) MRI images of a representative BRAF/p53 mouse showing an ATC (left), then regression 3 weeks after dox withdrawal (middle), and a recurrence 7 weeks later (right). (B) Tumor volume before and 3–4 weeks after withdrawal of dox (n = 27). Volume of 2 normal thyroid glands is shown for comparison. (C) Kaplan-Meier curve showing progression-free survival of BRAF/p53 mice harboring an ATC and continued on dox (ATC+dox) versus after dox withdrawal (ATC-dox). Control BRAF/p53 mice without MRI evidence of ATC at the time of dox withdrawal (no ATC-dox) are shown in red. Each cohort consisted of at least 13 mice. (D) Histological diagnoses of 15 primary tumors, 9 tumor remnants after dox withdrawal, and 22 recurrent tumors.
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