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Autocrine activation of the MET receptor tyrosine kinase in acute myeloid leukemia

Authors :
Casie Reed
Peter J. M. Valk
Vu N. Ngo
James G. Christensen
Eleni Tholouli
Jonathan D. Licht
Ruud Delwel
Kim L. Rice
George F. Vande Woude
Richard J. Byers
Amanda L. Christie
A. Thomas Look
Jeffery L. Kutok
Scott J. Rodig
Andrew L. Kung
Takaomi Sanda
Suzanne E. Dahlberg
Alex Kentsis
Louis M. Staudt
Lisa A. Moreau
Hematology
Source :
Nature Medicine, 18(7), 1118-+. Nature Publishing Group, Nature medicine
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2012.

Abstract

Although the treatment of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) has improved substantially in the past three decades, more than half of all patients develop disease that is refractory to intensive chemotherapy(1,2). Functional genomics approaches offer a means to discover specific molecules mediating the aberrant growth and survival of cancer cells(3-8). Thus, using a loss-of-function RNA interference genomic screen, we identified the aberrant expression of hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) as a crucial element in AML pathogenesis. We found HGF expression leading to autocrine activation of its receptor tyrosine kinase, MET, in nearly half of the AML cell lines and clinical samples we studied. Genetic depletion of HGF or MET potently inhibited the growth and survival of HGF-expressing AML cells. However, leukemic cells treated with the specific MET kinase inhibitor crizotinib developed resistance resulting from compensatory upregulation of HGF expression, leading to the restoration of MET signaling. In cases of AML where MET is coactivated with other tyrosine kinases, such as fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 (FGFR1)(9), concomitant inhibition of FGFR1 and MET blocked this compensatory HGF upregulation, resulting in sustained logarithmic cell killing both in vitro and in xenograft models in vivo. Our results show a widespread dependence of AML cells on autocrine activation of MET, as well as the key role of compensatory upregulation of HGF expression in maintaining leukemogenic signaling by this receptor. We anticipate that these findings will lead to the design of additional strategies to block adaptive cellular responses that drive compensatory ligand expression as an essential component of the targeted inhibition of oncogenic receptors in human cancers.

Details

ISSN :
1546170X and 10788956
Volume :
18
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....214732b5a76d8d55e2c732f003f0bda3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nm.2819