Functional genomics reveals an off-target dependency of drug synergy in gastric cancer therapy
- 1. Koc Univ, Res Ctr Translat Med, TR-34450 Istanbul, Turkiye
- 2. UMass Chan Med Sch, Dept Syst Biol, Worcester, MA 01605 USA
Description
BackgroundIntegrating molecular-targeted agents into combination chemotherapy is transformative for enhancing treatment outcomes in cancer. However, realizing the full potential of this approach requires a clear comprehension of the genetic dependencies underlying drug synergy. While the interactions between conventional chemotherapeutics are well-explored, the interplay of molecular-targeted agents with conventional chemotherapeutics remains a frontier in cancer treatment. Hence, we leveraged a powerful functional genomics approach to decode genomic dependencies that drive synergy in molecular-targeted agent/chemotherapeutic combinations in gastric adenocarcinoma, addressing a critical need in gastric cancer therapy.MethodsWe screened pharmacological interactions between fifteen molecular-targeted agent/conventional chemotherapeutic pairs in gastric adenocarcinoma cells, and examined the genome-scale genetic dependencies of synergy integrating genome-wide CRISPR screening with the shRNA-based signature assay. We validated the synergy in cell death using fluorescence-based and lysis-dependent inference of cell death kinetics assay, and validated the genetic dependencies by single-gene knockout experiments.ResultsOur combination screen identified SN-38/erlotinib as the drug pair with the strongest synergism. Functional genomics assays unveiled a genetic dependency signature of SN-38/erlotinib identical to SN-38. Remarkably, the enhanced cell death with improved kinetics induced by SN-38/erlotinib was attributed to erlotinib's off-target effect, inhibiting ABCG2, rather than its on-target effect on EGFR.ConclusionIn the era of precision medicine, where emphasis on primary drug targets prevails, our research challenges this paradigm by showcasing a robust synergy underpinned by an off-target dependency. Further dissection of the intricate genetic dependencies that underlie synergy can pave the way to developing more effective combination strategies in gastric cancer therapy.
Files
bib-4552e1df-b5b2-4c62-b6e5-9426b46fcd08.txt
Files
(197 Bytes)
| Name | Size | Download all |
|---|---|---|
|
md5:2fe64411ae160791769141c44dddf663
|
197 Bytes | Preview Download |