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Supplementary Methods and Supplementary Figures S2-S6 from Quantitative Phosphoproteomics Reveals Wee1 Kinase as a Therapeutic Target in a Model of Proneural Glioblastoma

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posted on 2023-04-03, 14:47 authored by Rebecca S. Lescarbeau, Liang Lei, Katrina K. Bakken, Peter A. Sims, Jann N. Sarkaria, Peter Canoll, Forest M. White

Supplementary Methods: Detailed decryption of all methods in the manuscript. Supplementary Figure S2. Heatmap of the 125 phosphopeptides quantified in the first tumor cohort and the normal brain tissues. Supplementary Figure S3. Heatmap of the 78 phosphopeptides quantified in the second tumor cohort and the normal brain tissues. Supplementary Figure S4. Immunoblots to characterize primary murine cell lines and CDK1 phosphorylation. Supplementary Figure S5. DNA damage and apoptosis in murine primary GBM cells. Supplementary Figure S6. Apoptosis and rescue of MGPP7 murine cells.

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NIH

Mayo Clinic

Mayo Brain Tumor SPORE

James S. McDonnell Foundation

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ARTICLE ABSTRACT

Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most common malignant primary brain cancer. With a median survival of about a year, new approaches to treating this disease are necessary. To identify signaling molecules regulating GBM progression in a genetically engineered murine model of proneural GBM, we quantified phosphotyrosine-mediated signaling using mass spectrometry. Oncogenic signals, including phosphorylated ERK MAPK, PI3K, and PDGFR, were found to be increased in the murine tumors relative to brain. Phosphorylation of CDK1 pY15, associated with the G2 arrest checkpoint, was identified as the most differentially phosphorylated site, with a 14-fold increase in phosphorylation in the tumors. To assess the role of this checkpoint as a potential therapeutic target, syngeneic primary cell lines derived from these tumors were treated with MK-1775, an inhibitor of Wee1, the kinase responsible for CDK1 Y15 phosphorylation. MK-1775 treatment led to mitotic catastrophe, as defined by increased DNA damage and cell death by apoptosis. To assess the extensibility of targeting Wee1/CDK1 in GBM, patient-derived xenograft (PDX) cell lines were also treated with MK-1775. Although the response was more heterogeneous, on-target Wee1 inhibition led to decreased CDK1 Y15 phosphorylation and increased DNA damage and apoptosis in each line. These results were also validated in vivo, where single-agent MK-1775 demonstrated an antitumor effect on a flank PDX tumor model, increasing mouse survival by 1.74-fold. This study highlights the ability of unbiased quantitative phosphoproteomics to reveal therapeutic targets in tumor models, and the potential for Wee1 inhibition as a treatment approach in preclinical models of GBM. Mol Cancer Ther; 15(6); 1332–43. ©2016 AACR.

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