Signaling networks assembled by oncogenic EGFR and c-Met

A Guo, J Villén, J Kornhauser, KA Lee… - Proceedings of the …, 2008 - National Acad Sciences
A Guo, J Villén, J Kornhauser, KA Lee, MP Stokes, K Rikova, A Possemato, J Nardone
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2008National Acad Sciences
A major question regarding the sensitivity of solid tumors to targeted kinase inhibitors is why
some tumors respond and others do not. The observation that many tumors express EGF
receptor (EGFR), yet only a small subset with EGFR-activating mutations respond clinically
to EGFR inhibitors (EGFRIs), suggests that responsive tumors uniquely depend on EGFR
signaling for their survival. The nature of this dependence is not understood. Here, we
investigate dependence on EGFR signaling by comparing non-small-cell lung cancer cell …
A major question regarding the sensitivity of solid tumors to targeted kinase inhibitors is why some tumors respond and others do not. The observation that many tumors express EGF receptor (EGFR), yet only a small subset with EGFR-activating mutations respond clinically to EGFR inhibitors (EGFRIs), suggests that responsive tumors uniquely depend on EGFR signaling for their survival. The nature of this dependence is not understood. Here, we investigate dependence on EGFR signaling by comparing non-small-cell lung cancer cell lines driven by EGFR-activating mutations and genomic amplifications using a global proteomic analysis of phospho-tyrosine signaling. We identify an extensive receptor tyrosine kinase signaling network established in cells expressing mutated and activated EGFR or expressing amplified c-Met. We show that in drug sensitive cells the targeted tyrosine kinase drives other RTKs and an extensive network of downstream signaling that collapse with drug treatment. Comparison of the signaling networks in EGFR and c-Met-dependent cells identify a “core network” of ≈50 proteins that participate in pathways mediating drug response.
National Acad Sciences