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The targetable kinase PIM1 drives ALK inhibitor resistance in high-risk neuroblastoma independent of MYCN status

Authors :
Trigg, Ricky M.
Lee, Liam C.
Prokoph, Nina
Jahangiri, Leila
Reynolds, C. Patrick
Amos Burke, G. A.
Probst, Nicola A.
Han, Miaojun
Matthews, Jamie D.
Lim, Hong Kai
Manners, Eleanor
Martinez, Sonia
Pastor, Joaquin
Blanco-Aparicio, Carmen
Merkel, Olaf
De Los Fayos Alonso, Ines Garces
Kodajova, Petra
Tangermann, Simone
Högler, Sandra
Luo, Ji
Kenner, Lukas
Turner, Suzanne D.
Publisher :
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository

Abstract

Resistance to anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK)-targeted therapy in ALK-positive non-small cell lung cancer has been reported, with the majority of acquired resistance mechanisms relying on bypass signaling. To proactively identify resistance mechanisms in ALK-positive neuroblastoma (NB), we herein employ genome-wide CRISPR activation screens of NB cell lines treated with brigatinib or ceritinib, identifying PIM1 as a putative resistance gene, whose high expression is associated with high-risk disease and poor survival. Knockdown of PIM1 sensitizes cells of differing MYCN status to ALK inhibitors, and in patient-derived xenografts of high-risk NB harboring ALK mutations, the combination of the ALK inhibitor ceritinib and PIM1 inhibitor AZD1208 shows significantly enhanced anti-tumor efficacy relative to single agents. These data confirm that PIM1 overexpression decreases sensitivity to ALK inhibitors in NB, and suggests that combined front-line inhibition of ALK and PIM1 is a viable strategy for the treatment of ALK-positive NB independent of MYCN status.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........8820a19250c74c417f3102fe277445cb