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Título
Resistance to the antibody-drug conjugate T-DM1 is based in a reduction in lysosomal proteolytic activity
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Breast cancer
HER2
ADC
T-DM1
Resistance to therapy
Clasificación UNESCO
2302 Bioquímica
3207.13 Oncología
Fecha de publicación
2017-09-01
Editor
American Association for Cancer Research
Citación
Ríos-Luci, C., García-Alonso, S., Díaz-Rodríguez, E., Nadal-Serrano, M., Arribas, J., Ocaña, A., & Pandiella, A. (2017). Resistance to the antibody–drug conjugate t-dm1 is based in a reduction in lysosomal proteolytic activity. Cancer Research, 77(17), 4639-4651. https://doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-16-3127. Epub 2017 Jul 7. PMID: 28687619.
Resumen
[EN]Trastuzumab-emtansine (T-DM1) is an antibody–drug conjugate (ADC) that was approved recently to treat HER2+ breast cancers. Despite its impressive clinical efficacy in many patients, intrinsic and acquired resistance to T-DM1 has emerged as a challenge. To identify mechanisms of T-DM1 resistance, we isolated several resistant HER2+ clones exhibiting stable drug refractoriness in vitro and in vivo. Genomic comparisons showed substantial differences among three of the isolated clones, indicating several potential mechanisms of resistance to T-DM1. However, we observed no differences in HER2 levels and signaling among the resistant models and parental HER2+ cells. Bioinformatics studies suggested that intracellular trafficking of T-DM1 could underlie resistance to T-DM1, and systematic analysis of the path followed by T-DM1 showed that the early steps in the internalization of the drug were unaltered. However, in some of the resistant clones, T-DM1 accumulated in lysosomes. In these clones, lysosomal pH was increased and the proteolytic activity of these organelles was deranged. These results were confirmed in T-DM1–resistant cells from patient-derived HER2+ samples. We postulate that resistance to T-DM1 occurs through multiple mechanisms, one of which is impaired lysosomal proteolytic activity. Because other ADC may use the same internalization-degradation pathway to deliver active payloads, strategies aimed at restoring lysosomal functionality might overcome resistance to ADC-based therapies and improve their effectiveness.
URI
ISSN
0008-5472
DOI
10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-16-3127
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