Molecular Oncology (Aug 2020)

RAF dimer inhibition enhances the antitumor activity of MEK inhibitors in K‐RAS mutant tumors

  • Xi Yuan,
  • Zhiyu Tang,
  • Rong Du,
  • Zhan Yao,
  • Shing‐Hu Cheung,
  • Xinwen Zhang,
  • Jing Wei,
  • Yuan Zhao,
  • Yunguang Du,
  • Ye Liu,
  • Xiaoxia Hu,
  • Wenfeng Gong,
  • Yong Liu,
  • Yajuan Gao,
  • Zhiyue Huang,
  • Zongfu Cao,
  • Min Wei,
  • Changyou Zhou,
  • Lai Wang,
  • Neal Rosen,
  • Paul D. Smith,
  • Lusong Luo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/1878-0261.12698
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 8
pp. 1833 – 1849

Abstract

Read online

The mutation of K‐RAS represents one of the most frequent genetic alterations in cancer. Targeting of downstream effectors of RAS, including of MEK and ERK, has limited clinical success in cancer patients with K‐RAS mutations. The reduced sensitivity of K‐RAS‐mutated cells to certain MEK inhibitors (MEKi) is associated with the feedback phosphorylation of MEK by C‐RAF and with the reactivation of mitogen‐activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling. Here, we report that the RAF dimer inhibitors lifirafenib (BGB‐283) and compound C show a strong synergistic effect with MEKi, including mirdametinib (PD‐0325901) and selumetinib, in suppressing the proliferation of K‐RAS‐mutated non‐small‐cell lung cancer and colorectal cancer (CRC) cell lines. This synergistic effect was not observed with the B‐RAFV600E selective inhibitor vemurafenib. Our mechanistic analysis revealed that RAF dimer inhibition suppresses RAF‐dependent MEK reactivation and leads to the sustained inhibition of MAPK signaling in K‐RAS‐mutated cells. This synergistic effect was also observed in several K‐RAS mutant mouse xenograft models. A pharmacodynamic analysis supported a role for the synergistic phospho‐ERK blockade in enhancing the antitumor activity observed in the K‐RAS mutant models. These findings support a vertical inhibition strategy in which RAF dimer and MEKi are combined to target K‐RAS‐mutated cancers, and have led to a Phase 1b/2 combination therapy study of lifirafenib and mirdametinib in solid tumor patients with K‐RAS mutations and other MAPK pathway aberrations.

Keywords