De-Repression of PDGFRβ Transcription Promotes Acquired Resistance to EGFR Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors in Glioblastoma Patients

2013 
Acquired resistance to tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI) represents a major challenge for personalized cancer therapy. Multiple genetic mechanisms of acquired TKI resistance have been identified in several types of human cancer. However, the possibility that cancer cells may also evade treatment by co-opting physiologically regulated receptors has not been addressed. Here we demonstrate the first example of this alternate mechanism in brain tumors by showing that EGFR-mutant glioblastomas (GBMs) evade EGFR TKIs by transcriptionally de-repressing PDGFRβ. Mechanistic studies demonstrate that EGFRvIII signaling actively suppresses PDGFRβ transcription in an mTORC1 and ERK-dependent manner. Genetic or pharmacologic inhibition of oncogenic EGFR renders GBMs dependent on the consequently de-repressed PDGFRβ signaling for growth and survival. Importantly, combined inhibition of EGFR and PDGFRβ signaling potently suppresses tumor growth in vivo. These data identify a novel, non-genetic TKI resistance mechanism in brain tumors and provide compelling rationale for combination therapy.
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