학술논문

Protein signaling and drug target activation signatures to guide therapy prioritization: Therapeutic resistance and sensitivity in the I-SPY 2 Trial
Document Type
article
Source
Cell Reports Medicine. 4(12)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Oncology and Carcinogenesis
Immunology
Genetics
Cancer
Breast Cancer
Detection
screening and diagnosis
Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions
5.1 Pharmaceuticals
4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies
Good Health and Well Being
Humans
Drug Resistance
Neoplasm
Neoadjuvant Therapy
Triple Negative Breast Neoplasms
Biomarkers
Gene Expression Profiling
I-SPY 2 Investigators
LCM
RPPA
biomarker
breast cancer
clinical trial
drug target
neoadjuvant
phosphoprotein
protein
resistance
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
Molecular subtyping of breast cancer is based mostly on HR/HER2 and gene expression-based immune, DNA repair deficiency, and luminal signatures. We extend this description via functional protein pathway activation mapping using pre-treatment, quantitative expression data from 139 proteins/phosphoproteins from 736 patients across 8 treatment arms of the I-SPY 2 Trial (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT01042379). We identify predictive fit-for-purpose, mechanism-of-action-based signatures and individual predictive protein biomarker candidates by evaluating associations with pathologic complete response. Elevated levels of cyclin D1, estrogen receptor alpha, and androgen receptor S650 associate with non-response and are biomarkers for global resistance. We uncover protein/phosphoprotein-based signatures that can be utilized both for molecularly rationalized therapeutic selection and for response prediction. We introduce a dichotomous HER2 activation response predictive signature for stratifying triple-negative breast cancer patients to either HER2 or immune checkpoint therapy response as a model for how protein activation signatures provide a different lens to view the molecular landscape of breast cancer and synergize with transcriptomic-defined signatures.