학술논문

RasGRP1 is a potential biomarker to stratify anti-EGFR therapy response in colorectal cancer
Document Type
article
Source
JCI Insight. 5(15)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Oncology and Carcinogenesis
Immunology
Colo-Rectal Cancer
Cancer
Digestive Diseases
4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies
Detection
screening and diagnosis
Good Health and Well Being
Animals
Antineoplastic Agents
Immunological
Biomarkers
Tumor
Cell Proliferation
Cetuximab
Clinical Trials as Topic
Colorectal Neoplasms
Computational Biology
DNA-Binding Proteins
Datasets as Topic
Disease Models
Animal
Disease Progression
Disease-Free Survival
ErbB Receptors
Guanine Nucleotide Exchange Factors
Humans
Kaplan-Meier Estimate
Mice
Mice
Knockout
Primary Cell Culture
Prognosis
Signal Transduction
Spheroids
Cellular
Tumor Cells
Cultured
Tumor Suppressor Proteins
Colorectal cancer
Drug therapy
Gastroenterology
Signal transduction
Therapeutics
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Health sciences
Language
Abstract
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most frequent neoplastic disorder and is a main cause of tumor-related mortality as many patients progress to stage IV metastatic CRC. Standard care consists of combination chemotherapy (FOLFIRI or FOLFOX). Patients with WT KRAS typing are eligible to receive anti-EGFR therapy combined with chemotherapy. Unfortunately, predicting efficacy of CRC anti-EGFR therapy has remained challenging. Here we uncover that the EGFR-pathway component RasGRP1 acts as CRC tumor suppressor in the context of aberrant Wnt signaling. We find that RasGRP1 suppresses EGF-driven proliferation of colonic epithelial organoids. Having established that RasGRP1 dosage levels impacts biology, we focused on CRC patients next. Mining five different data platforms, we establish that RasGRP1 expression levels decrease with CRC progression and predict poor clinical outcome of patients. Lastly, deletion of one or two Rasgrp1 alleles makes CRC spheroids more susceptible to EGFR inhibition. Retrospective analysis of the CALGB80203 clinical trial shows that addition of anti-EGFR therapy to chemotherapy significantly improves outcome for CRC patients when tumors express low RasGRP1 suppressor levels. In sum, RasGRP1 is a unique biomarker positioned in the EGFR pathway and of potential relevance to anti-EGFR therapy for CRC patients.