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Drugging the catalytically inactive state of RET kinase in RET-rearranged tumors.

Authors :
Plenker, Dennis
Plenker, Dennis
Riedel, Maximilian
Brägelmann, Johannes
Dammert, Marcel A
Chauhan, Rakhee
Knowles, Phillip P
Lorenz, Carina
Keul, Marina
Bührmann, Mike
Pagel, Oliver
Tischler, Verena
Scheel, Andreas H
Schütte, Daniel
Song, Yanrui
Stark, Justina
Mrugalla, Florian
Alber, Yannic
Richters, André
Engel, Julian
Leenders, Frauke
Heuckmann, Johannes M
Wolf, Jürgen
Diebold, Joachim
Pall, Georg
Peifer, Martin
Aerts, Maarten
Gevaert, Kris
Zahedi, René P
Buettner, Reinhard
Shokat, Kevan M
McDonald, Neil Q
Kast, Stefan M
Gautschi, Oliver
Thomas, Roman K
Sos, Martin L
Plenker, Dennis
Plenker, Dennis
Riedel, Maximilian
Brägelmann, Johannes
Dammert, Marcel A
Chauhan, Rakhee
Knowles, Phillip P
Lorenz, Carina
Keul, Marina
Bührmann, Mike
Pagel, Oliver
Tischler, Verena
Scheel, Andreas H
Schütte, Daniel
Song, Yanrui
Stark, Justina
Mrugalla, Florian
Alber, Yannic
Richters, André
Engel, Julian
Leenders, Frauke
Heuckmann, Johannes M
Wolf, Jürgen
Diebold, Joachim
Pall, Georg
Peifer, Martin
Aerts, Maarten
Gevaert, Kris
Zahedi, René P
Buettner, Reinhard
Shokat, Kevan M
McDonald, Neil Q
Kast, Stefan M
Gautschi, Oliver
Thomas, Roman K
Sos, Martin L
Source :
Science translational medicine; vol 9, iss 394, eaah6144; 1946-6234
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Oncogenic fusion events have been identified in a broad range of tumors. Among them, RET rearrangements represent distinct and potentially druggable targets that are recurrently found in lung adenocarcinomas. We provide further evidence that current anti-RET drugs may not be potent enough to induce durable responses in such tumors. We report that potent inhibitors, such as AD80 or ponatinib, that stably bind in the DFG-out conformation of RET may overcome these limitations and selectively kill RET-rearranged tumors. Using chemical genomics in conjunction with phosphoproteomic analyses in RET-rearranged cells, we identify the CCDC6-RETI788N mutation and drug-induced mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway reactivation as possible mechanisms by which tumors may escape the activity of RET inhibitors. Our data provide mechanistic insight into the druggability of RET kinase fusions that may be of help for the development of effective therapies targeting such tumors.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Science translational medicine; vol 9, iss 394, eaah6144; 1946-6234
Notes :
application/pdf, Science translational medicine vol 9, iss 394, eaah6144 1946-6234
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1391613637
Document Type :
Electronic Resource