Antibody-drug conjugates (ADC) are multicomponent molecules constituted by an antibody covalently linked to a potent cytotoxic agent. ADCs combine high target specificity provided by the antibody together with strong antitumoral properties provided by the attached cytotoxic agent. At present, four ADCs have been approved and over 60 are being explored in clinical trials. Despite their effectiveness, resistance to these drugs unfortunately occurs. Efforts to understand the bases underlying such resistance are being carried out with the final purpose of counteracting them. In this review, we report described mechanisms of resistance to ADCs used in the clinic along with other potential ones that may contribute to resistance acquisition. We also discuss strategies to overcome resistance to ADCs. .
Trastuzumab-emtansine (T-DM1) is an antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) that was approved recently to treat HER2 breast cancers. Despite its impressive clinical efficacy in many patients, intrinsic and acquired resistance to T-DM1 has emerged as a challenge. To identify mechanisms of T-DM1 resistance, we isolated several resistant HER2 clones exhibiting stable drug refractoriness and Genomic comparisons showed substantial differences among three of the isolated clones, indicating several potential mechanisms of resistance to T-DM1. However, we observed no differences in HER2 levels and signaling among the resistant models and parental HER2 cells. Bioinformatics studies suggested that intracellular trafficking of T-DM1 could underlie resistance to T-DM1, and systematic analysis of the path followed by T-DM1 showed that the early steps in the internalization of the drug were unaltered. However, in some of the resistant clones, T-DM1 accumulated in lysosomes. In these clones, lysosomal pH was increased and the proteolytic activity of these organelles was deranged. These results were confirmed in T-DM1-resistant cells from patient-derived HER2 samples. We postulate that resistance to T-DM1 occurs through multiple mechanisms, one of which is impaired lysosomal proteolytic activity. Because other ADC may use the same internalization-degradation pathway to deliver active payloads, strategies aimed at restoring lysosomal functionality might overcome resistance to ADC-based therapies and improve their effectiveness. .
Trastuzumab-emtansine (T-DM1) is a standard treatment in advanced HER2-positive breast cancer. However, resistance inevitably occurs. We aimed to identify mechanisms of acquired T-DM1 resistance. HER2-positive breast cancer cells (HCC1954, HCC1419, SKBR3, and BT474) were treated in a pulse-fashion with T-DM1 to induce a resistant phenotype. Cellular and molecular effects of T-DM1 in parental versus resistant cells were compared. CDK1 kinase activity and cyclin B1 expression were assayed under various conditions. Genetic modifications to up- or downregulate were conducted. Effects of T-DM1 on cyclin B1 levels, proliferation, and apoptosis were assayed in human-positive breast cancer explants. We obtained three cell lines with different levels of acquired T-DM1 resistance (HCC1954/TDR, HCC1419/TDR, and SKBR3/TDR cells). HER2 remained amplified in the resistant cells. Binding to HER2 and intracellular uptake of T-DM1 were maintained in resistant cells. T-DM1 induced cyclin B1 accumulation in sensitive but not resistant cells. knockdown by siRNA in parental cells induced T-DM1 resistance, while increased levels of cyclin B1 by silencing partially sensitized resistant cells. In a series of 18 HER2-positive breast cancer fresh explants, T-DM1 effects on proliferation and apoptosis paralleled cyclin B1 accumulation. Defective cyclin B1 induction by T-DM1 mediates acquired resistance in HER2-positive breast cancer cells. These results support the testing of cyclin B1 induction upon T-DM1 treatment as a pharmacodynamic predictor in HER2-positive breast cancer. .
The activation status of a set of pro-oncogenic tyrosine kinases in ovarian cancer patient samples was analyzed to define potential therapeutic targets. Frequent activation of HER family receptor tyrosine kinases, especially HER2, was observed. Studies in ovarian cancer cell lines confirmed the activation of HER2. Moreover, knockdown of HER2 caused a strong inhibition of their proliferation. Analyses of the action of agents that target HER2 indicated that the antibody drug conjugate trastuzumab-emtansine (T-DM1) caused a substantial antitumoral effect in vivo and in vitro, and potentiated the action of drugs used in the therapy of ovarian cancer. T-DM1 provoked cell cycle arrest in mitosis, and caused the appearance of aberrant mitotic spindles in cells treated with the drug. Biochemical experiments confirmed accumulation of the mitotic markers phospho-Histone H3 and phospho-BUBR1 in cells treated with the drug. Prolonged treatment of ovarian cancer cells with T-DM1 provoked the appearance of multinucleated cells which later led to cell death. Together, these data indicate that HER2 represents an important oncogene in ovarian cancer, and suggest that targeting this tyrosine kinase with T-DM1 may be therapeutically effective, especially in ovarian tumors with high content of HER2.
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