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Data from MNK Inhibition Sensitizes KRAS-Mutant Colorectal Cancer to mTORC1 Inhibition by Reducing eIF4E Phosphorylation and c-MYC Expression

Authors :
Owen J. Sansom
Martin Bushell
Anne E. Willis
Joanne Edwards
John Le Quesne
William J. Faller
Heather J. McKinnon
Martin E. Swarbrick
Neil P. Jones
Christopher G. Proud
Nahum Sonenberg
Kevin M. Haigis
Nicola Valeri
Georgios Vlachogiannis
Andrew D. Campbell
Joseph A. Waldron
Rene Jackstadt
Joshua D. Leach
Emma Stanway
Kerri McArthur
Anne Cheasty
Craig MacKay
Laura McDonald
Rachael C.L. Smith
Dustin J. Flanagan
Rachel A. Ridgway
Kathryn Gilroy
Arafath K. Najumudeen
Ewan M. Smith
Sebastian May-Wilson
David M. Gay
Georgios Kanellos
Ana Teodosio
Leah Officer
Kathryn Pennel
Nikola Vlahov
George L. Skalka
Constantinos Alexandrou
John R.P. Knight
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

KRAS-mutant colorectal cancers are resistant to therapeutics, presenting a significant problem for ∼40% of cases. Rapalogs, which inhibit mTORC1 and thus protein synthesis, are significantly less potent in KRAS-mutant colorectal cancer. Using Kras-mutant mouse models and mouse- and patient-derived organoids, we demonstrate that KRAS with G12D mutation fundamentally rewires translation to increase both bulk and mRNA-specific translation initiation. This occurs via the MNK/eIF4E pathway culminating in sustained expression of c-MYC. By genetic and small-molecule targeting of this pathway, we acutely sensitize KRASG12D models to rapamycin via suppression of c-MYC. We show that 45% of colorectal cancers have high signaling through mTORC1 and the MNKs, with this signature correlating with a 3.5-year shorter cancer-specific survival in a subset of patients. This work provides a c-MYC–dependent cotargeting strategy with remarkable potency in multiple Kras-mutant mouse models and metastatic human organoids and identifies a patient population that may benefit from its clinical application.Significance:KRAS mutation and elevated c-MYC are widespread in many tumors but remain predominantly untargetable. We find that mutant KRAS modulates translation, culminating in increased expression of c-MYC. We describe an effective strategy targeting mTORC1 and MNK in KRAS-mutant mouse and human models, pathways that are also commonly co-upregulated in colorectal cancer.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 995

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4f56670615fce027f717d8d9f47081b8