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A saturation mutagenesis screen uncovers resistant and sensitizing secondary KRAS mutations to clinical KRASG12C inhibitors

Menée à l'aide d'une lignée cellulaire de cancer du poumon non à petites cellules, d'une technique de mutagenèse par saturation et de données génétiques portant sur des échantillons tumoraux, cette étude identifie des mutations secondaires de KRAS conférant une résistance ou une sensibilité aux inhibiteurs de la GTPase KRAS avec mutation G12C

Mutant-specific inhibitors of KRASG12C, such as AMG510 (sotorasib) and MRTX849 (adagrasib), offer the unprecedented opportunity to inhibit KRAS, the most frequently mutated and heretofore undruggable oncoprotein. While clinical data are still limited, on-target mutations in KRASG12C at position 12 and other sites are emerging as major drivers of clinical relapse. We identified additional mutations in KRASG12C that impact inhibitor sensitivity through a saturation mutagenesis screen in the KRASG12C NCI-H358 non–small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cell line. We also identified individuals in population genetic databases harboring these resistance mutations in their germline and in tumors, including a subset that co-occur with KRASG12C, indicating that these mutations may preexist in patients treated with KRASG12C inhibitors. Notably, through structural modeling, we found that one such mutation (R68L) interferes with the critical protein–drug interface, conferring resistance to both inhibitors. Finally, we uncovered a mutant (S17E) that demonstrated a strong sensitizing phenotype to both inhibitors. Functional studies suggest that S17E sensitizes KRASG12C cells to KRASG12C inhibition by impacting signaling through PI3K/AKT/mTOR but not the MAPK signaling pathway. Our studies highlight the utility of unbiased mutation profiling to understand the functional consequences of all variants of a disease-causing genetic mutant and predict acquired resistant mutations in the targeted therapeutics.

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences , article en libre accès, 2022

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