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Frequency, impact and a preclinical study of novel ERBB gene family mutations in HER2-positive breast cancer

Authors :
Elaine W. Kay
Mattia Cremona
John Crown
Jarushka Naidoo
Naomi Elster
Karolina Weiner Gorzel
Una Bhreathnach
William M. Gallagher
Alex J Eustace
Arnold D.K. Hill
Susan Kennedy
Joanna Fay
Oscar Breathhnach
Stephen F. Madden
Sean P. Kennedy
Madeline Murphy
Simon J Furney
Yue Fan
Malgorzata Milewska
Patrick G. Morris
Janusz Mezynski
Sinead Toomey
Clare Morgan
Bryan T. Hennessy
Liam Grogan
Aoife Carr
Source :
Therapeutic Advances in Medical Oncology, Therapeutic Advances in Medical Oncology, Vol 10 (2018)
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2018.

Abstract

Background: Somatic mutations in the ERBB genes (epidermal growth factor receptor: EGFR, ERBB2, ERBB3, ERBB4) promote oncogenesis and lapatinib resistance in metastatic HER2+ (human epidermal growth factor-like receptor 2) breast cancer in vitro. Our study aimed to determine the frequency of mutations in four genes: EGFR, ERBB2, ERBB3 and ERBB4 and to investigate whether these mutations affect cellular behaviour and therapy response in vitro and outcomes after adjuvant trastuzumab-based therapy in clinical samples. Methods: We performed Agena MassArray analysis of 227 HER2+ breast cancer samples to identify the type and frequency of ERBB family mutations. Of these, two mutations, the somatic mutations ERBB4-V721I and ERBB4-S303F, were stably transfected into HCC1954 (PIK3CA mutant), HCC1569 (PIK3CA wildtype) and BT474 (PIK3CA mutant, ER positive) HER2+ breast cancer cell lines for functional in vitro experiments. Results: A total of 12 somatic, likely deleterious mutations in the kinase and furin-like domains of the ERBB genes (3 EGFR, 1 ERBB2, 3 ERBB3, 5 ERBB4) were identified in 7% of HER2+ breast cancers, with ERBB4 the most frequently mutated gene. The ERBB4-V721I kinase domain mutation significantly increased 3D-colony formation in 3/3 cell lines, whereas ERBB4-S303F did not increase growth rate or 3D colony formation in vitro. ERBB4-V721I sensitized HCC1569 cells (PIK3CA wildtype) to the pan class I PI3K inhibitor copanlisib but increased resistance to the pan-HER family inhibitor afatinib. The combinations of copanlisib with trastuzumab, lapatinib, or afatinib remained synergistic regardless of ERBB4-V721I or ERBB4-S303F mutation status. Conclusions: ERBB gene family mutations, which are present in 7% of our HER2+ breast cancer cohort, may have the potential to alter cellular behaviour and the efficacy of HER- and PI3K-inhibition.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17588359 and 17588340
Volume :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Therapeutic Advances in Medical Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....21ecaec6b92fb5d87bcd41c30abf891f