The KRASG12C Inhibitor MRTX849 Provides Insight toward Therapeutic Susceptibility of KRAS-Mutant Cancers in Mouse Models and Patients

Jill Hallin(Mirati Therapeutics (United States)), Lars D. Engstrom(Mirati Therapeutics (United States)), Lauren Hargis(Mirati Therapeutics (United States)), Andrew Calinisan(Mirati Therapeutics (United States)), Ruth Aranda(Mirati Therapeutics (United States)), David M. Briere(Mirati Therapeutics (United States)), Niranjan Sudhakar(Mirati Therapeutics (United States)), Vickie Bowcut(Mirati Therapeutics (United States)), Brian R. Baer(Array BioPharma (United States)), Joshua A. Ballard(Array BioPharma (United States)), Michael Burkard(Array BioPharma (United States)), Jay B. Fell(Array BioPharma (United States)), John P. Fischer(Array BioPharma (United States)), Guy Vigers(Array BioPharma (United States)), Jenny Y. Xue(Kettering University), Sole Gatto(Bell Biosystems (United States)), Julio Fernandez-Banet(Bell Biosystems (United States)), Adam Pavlı́ček(Bell Biosystems (United States)), Karen Velastagui(Mirati Therapeutics (United States)), Richard C. Chao(Mirati Therapeutics (United States)), Jeremy Barton(Mirati Therapeutics (United States)), Mariaelena Pierobon(George Mason University), Elisa Baldelli(George Mason University), Emanuel F. Patricoin(George Mason University), Douglas P. Cassidy(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Matthew A. Marx(Mirati Therapeutics (United States)), Igor I. Rybkin(Detroit Medical Center), Melissa L. Johnson(Tennessee Oncology), Sai‐Hong Ignatius Ou(University of California, Irvine Medical Center), Piro Lito(Kettering University), Kyriakos P. Papadopoulos(Center for Health Care Services), Pasi A. Jänne(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Peter Olson(Mirati Therapeutics (United States)), James G. Christensen(Mirati Therapeutics (United States))
Cancer Discovery
October 28, 2019
Cited by 1,275Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Despite decades of research, efforts to directly target KRAS have been challenging. MRTX849 was identified as a potent, selective, and covalent KRASG12C inhibitor that exhibits favorable drug-like properties, selectively modifies mutant cysteine 12 in GDP-bound KRASG12C, and inhibits KRAS-dependent signaling. MRTX849 demonstrated pronounced tumor regression in 17 of 26 (65%) KRASG12C-positive cell line– and patient-derived xenograft models from multiple tumor types, and objective responses have been observed in patients with KRASG12C-positive lung and colon adenocarcinomas. Comprehensive pharmacodynamic and pharmacogenomic profiling in sensitive and partially resistant nonclinical models identified mechanisms implicated in limiting antitumor activity including KRAS nucleotide cycling and pathways that induce feedback reactivation and/or bypass KRAS dependence. These factors included activation of receptor tyrosine kinases (RTK), bypass of KRAS dependence, and genetic dysregulation of cell cycle. Combinations of MRTX849 with agents that target RTKs, mTOR, or cell cycle demonstrated enhanced response and marked tumor regression in several tumor models, including MRTX849-refractory models. Significance: The discovery of MRTX849 provides a long-awaited opportunity to selectively target KRASG12C in patients. The in-depth characterization of MRTX849 activity, elucidation of response and resistance mechanisms, and identification of effective combinations provide new insight toward KRAS dependence and the rational development of this class of agents. See related commentary by Klempner and Hata, p. 20. This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1


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