Translational Oncology (Nov 2024)

Chitinase 3-like-1 (CHI3L1) in the pathogenesis of epidermal growth factor receptor mutant non-small cell lung cancer

  • Suchitra Kamle,
  • Bing Ma,
  • Gail Schor,
  • Madison Bailey,
  • Brianna Pham,
  • Inyoung Cho,
  • Hina Khan,
  • Christopher Azzoli,
  • Mara Hofstetter,
  • Takayuki Sadanaga,
  • Roy Herbst,
  • Katerina Politi,
  • Chun Geun Lee,
  • Jack A. Elias

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 49
p. 102108

Abstract

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Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) accounts for 85 % of all lung cancers. In NSCLC, 10–20 % of Caucasian patients and 30–50 % of Asian patients have tumors with activating mutations in the Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor (EGFR). A high percentage of these patients exhibit favorable responses to treatment with tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI). Unfortunately, a majority of these patients develop therapeutic resistance with progression free survival lasting 9–18 months. The mechanisms that underlie the tumorigenic effects of EGFR and the ability of NSCLC to develop resistance to TKI therapies, however, are poorly understood. Here we demonstrate that CHI3L1 is produced by EGFR activation of normal epithelial cells, transformed epithelial cells with wild type EGFR and cells with cancer-associated, activating EGFR mutations. We also demonstrate that CHI3L1 auto-induces itself and feeds back to stimulate EGFR and its ligands via a STAT3-dependent mechanism(s). Highly specific antibodies against CHI3L1 (anti-CHI3L1/FRG) and TKI, individually and in combination, abrogated the effects of EGFR activation on CHI3L1 and the ability of CHI3L1 to stimulate the EGFR axis. Anti-CHI3L1 also interacted with osimertinib to reverse TKI therapeutic resistance and induce tumor cell death and inhibit pulmonary metastasis while stimulating tumor suppressor genes including KEAP1. CHI3L1 is a downstream target of EGFR that feeds back to stimulate and activate the EGFR axis. Anti-CHI3L1 is an exciting potential therapeutic for EGFR mutant NSCLC, alone and in combination with osimertinib or other TKIs.

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