Journal of Experimental & Clinical Cancer Research (Mar 2020)

Oncogenic and drug-sensitive RET mutations in human epithelial ovarian cancer

  • Luyao Guan,
  • Zhang Li,
  • Feifei Xie,
  • Yuzhi Pang,
  • Chenyun Zhang,
  • Haosha Tang,
  • Hao Zhang,
  • Chun Chen,
  • Yaying Zhan,
  • Ting Zhao,
  • Hongyuan Jiang,
  • Xiaona Jia,
  • Yuexiang Wang,
  • Yuan Lu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13046-020-01557-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 39, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Background Epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) is a highly lethal malignancy. Improvement in genetic characterization of EOC patients is required to propose new potential targets, since surgical resection coupled to chemotherapy, presents several limits such as cancer recurrence and drug resistance. Targeted therapies have more efficacy and less toxicity than standard treatments. One of the most relevant cancer-specific actionable targets are protein tyrosine kinases (PTKs) whose role in EOC need to be better investigated. Methods EOC genomic datasets are retrieved and analyzed. The biological and clinical significance of RET genomic aberrations in ovarian cancer context are investigated by a series of in vitro and in vivo experiments. Results Epithelial ovarian cancer sequencing projects identify recurrent genomic RET missense mutations in 1.98% of patients, ranking as the top-five hit among the 100 receptor tyrosine kinases-encoding genes. RET mutants R693H and A750T show oncogenic transformation properties in NIH3T3 cells. Introduction of the RET mutants into human EOC cells increases RET signaling, cell viability, anchorage-independent cell growth and tumor xenograft growth in nude mice, demonstrating that they are activating mutations. RET mutants significantly enhance the activation of RET and its downstream MAPK and AKT signaling pathway in ovarian cancer cells. Vandetanib, a clinical approved RET inhibitor, inhibits the cell viability and decreases the activation of RET-MAPK signaling pathways in EOC cells expressing oncogenic RET mutants. Conclusions The discovery of RET pathogenic variants in the EOC patients, suggests a previously underestimated role for RET in EOC tumorigenesis. The identification of the gain-of-function RET mutations in EOC highlights the potential use of RET in targeted therapy to treat ovarian cancer patients.

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