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Supplementary Figure S1 from MTORC1/2 Inhibition as a Therapeutic Strategy for PIK3CA Mutant Cancers

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posted on 2023-04-03, 15:42 authored by Stephanie L. Fricke, Susan N. Payne, Peter F. Favreau, Jeremy D. Kratz, Cheri A. Pasch, Tyler M. Foley, Alexander E. Yueh, Dana R. Van De Hey, Mitchell G. Depke, Demetra P. Korkos, Gioia Chengcheng Sha, Rebecca A. DeStefanis, Linda Clipson, Mark E. Burkard, Kayla K. Lemmon, Benjamin M. Parsons, Paraic A. Kenny, Kristina A. Matkowskyj, Michael A. Newton, Melissa C. Skala, Dustin A. Deming

Supplementary Figure S1 presents the viability of SW48 and SW48PK cells after treatment with BEZ235 and TAK-228 at the 100-400nM concentrations.

Funding

V Foundation for Cancer Research

Stand Up To Cancer

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ARTICLE ABSTRACT

PIK3CA mutations are common in clinical molecular profiling, yet an effective means to target these cancers has yet to be developed. MTORC1 inhibitors are often used off-label for patients with PIK3CA mutant cancers with only limited data to support this approach. Here we describe a cohort of patients treated with cancers possessing mutations activating the PI3K signaling cascade with minimal benefit to treatment with the MTORC1 inhibitor everolimus. Previously, we demonstrated that dual PI3K/mTOR inhibition could decrease proliferation, induce differentiation, and result in a treatment response in APC and PIK3CA mutant colorectal cancer. However, reactivation of AKT was identified, indicating that the majority of the benefit may be secondary to MTORC1/2 inhibition. TAK-228, an MTORC1/2 inhibitor, was compared with dual PI3K/mTOR inhibition using BEZ235 in murine colorectal cancer spheroids. A reduction in spheroid size was observed with TAK-228 and BEZ235 (−13% and −14%, respectively) compared with an increase of >200% in control (P < 0.001). These spheroids were resistant to MTORC1 inhibition. In transgenic mice possessing Pik3ca and Apc mutations, BEZ235 and TAK-228 resulted in a median reduction in colon tumor size of 19% and 20%, respectively, with control tumors having a median increase of 18% (P = 0.02 and 0.004, respectively). This response correlated with a decrease in the phosphorylation of 4EBP1 and RPS6. MTORC1/2 inhibition is sufficient to overcome resistance to everolimus and induce a treatment response in PIK3CA mutant colorectal cancers and deserves investigation in clinical trials and in future combination regimens.