Targeting of KRAS mutant tumors by HSP90 inhibitors involves degradation of STK33

Ninel Azoitei(Universität Ulm), Christopher M. Hoffmann(German Cancer Research Center), Jana M. Ellegast(Universität Ulm), Claudia R. Ball(German Cancer Research Center), Kerstin Obermayer(Universität Ulm), Ulrike Gößele(Universität Ulm), Britta Koch(Universität Ulm), Katrin Faber(Universität Ulm), Felicitas Genze(Universität Ulm), Mark Schrader(Universität Ulm), Hans A. Kestler(Universität Ulm), Hartmut Döhner(Universität Ulm), Gabriela Chiosis(Kettering University), Hanno Glimm(German Cancer Research Center), Stefan Fröhling(Universität Ulm), Claudia Scholl(Universität Ulm)
The Journal of Experimental Medicine
March 26, 2012
Cited by 78Open Access
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Abstract

Previous efforts to develop drugs that directly inhibit the activity of mutant KRAS, the most commonly mutated human oncogene, have not been successful. Cancer cells driven by mutant KRAS require expression of the serine/threonine kinase STK33 for their viability and proliferation, identifying STK33 as a context-dependent therapeutic target. However, specific strategies for interfering with the critical functions of STK33 are not yet available. Here, using a mass spectrometry-based screen for STK33 protein interaction partners, we report that the HSP90/CDC37 chaperone complex binds to and stabilizes STK33 in human cancer cells. Pharmacologic inhibition of HSP90, using structurally divergent small molecules currently in clinical development, induced proteasome-mediated degradation of STK33 in human cancer cells of various tissue origin in vitro and in vivo, and triggered apoptosis preferentially in KRAS mutant cells in an STK33-dependent manner. Furthermore, HSP90 inhibitor treatment impaired sphere formation and viability of primary human colon tumor-initiating cells harboring mutant KRAS. These findings provide mechanistic insight into the activity of HSP90 inhibitors in KRAS mutant cancer cells, indicate that the enhanced requirement for STK33 can be exploited to target mutant KRAS-driven tumors, and identify STK33 depletion through HSP90 inhibition as a biomarker-guided therapeutic strategy with immediate translational potential.


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