MEK1 mutations confer resistance to MEK and B-RAF inhibition

Caroline M. Emery(Harvard University), Krishna G. Vijayendran(Harvard University), Marie Zipser(University Hospital of Zurich), Allison M. Sawyer(Harvard University), Lili Niu(Harvard University), Jessica Kim(Harvard University), Charlie Hatton(Harvard University), Rajiv Chopra(Boston Biomedical Research Institute), Patrick A. Oberholzer(Broad Institute), Maria B. Karpova(University Hospital of Zurich), Laura E. MacConaill(Harvard University), Jianming Zhang(Harvard University), Nathanael S. Gray(Harvard University), William R. Sellers(Boston Biomedical Research Institute), Reinhard Dummer(University Hospital of Zurich), Levi A. Garraway(Broad Institute)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
November 14, 2009
Cited by 634Open Access
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Abstract

Genetic alterations that activate the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAP kinase) pathway occur commonly in cancer. For example, the majority of melanomas harbor mutations in the BRAF oncogene, which are predicted to confer enhanced sensitivity to pharmacologic MAP kinase inhibition (e.g., RAF or MEK inhibitors). We investigated the clinical relevance of MEK dependency in melanoma by massively parallel sequencing of resistant clones generated from a MEK1 random mutagenesis screen in vitro, as well as tumors obtained from relapsed patients following treatment with AZD6244, an allosteric MEK inhibitor. Most mutations conferring resistance to MEK inhibition in vitro populated the allosteric drug binding pocket or alpha-helix C and showed robust ( approximately 100-fold) resistance to allosteric MEK inhibition. Other mutations affected MEK1 codons located within or abutting the N-terminal negative regulatory helix (helix A), which also undergo gain-of-function germline mutations in cardio-facio-cutaneous (CFC) syndrome. One such mutation, MEK1(P124L), was identified in a resistant metastatic focus that emerged in a melanoma patient treated with AZD6244. Both MEK1(P124L) and MEK1(Q56P), which disrupts helix A, conferred cross-resistance to PLX4720, a selective B-RAF inhibitor. However, exposing BRAF-mutant melanoma cells to AZD6244 and PLX4720 in combination prevented emergence of resistant clones. These results affirm the importance of MEK dependency in BRAF-mutant melanoma and suggest novel mechanisms of resistance to MEK and B-RAF inhibitors that may have important clinical implications.


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