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Kinase test may yield big gains for drug-resistant cancers

14 Apr 2012
Kinase test may yield big gains for drug-resistant cancers

In a paper published in the journal Cell, a team from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill unveils the first broad-based test for activation of protein kinases "en masse", enabling measurement of the mechanism behind drug-resistant cancer and rational prediction of successful combination therapies.

 

Kinases are proteins expressed in human tissues that play a key role in cell growth, particularly in cancer.

 

Of the 518 known human kinases, about 400 are expressed in cancers, but which ones and how many are actually active in tumours has been difficult to measure.

 

Tremendous efforts have been made to develop kinase inhibitors as cancer treatments

 

However, in spite of the effectiveness of this class of cancer drugs, most cancers eventually become resistant.

 

The UNC team has developed a test that can measure both the presence and activity of 60-70 percent of all kinases simultaneously, allowing investigators to see how cancers evade treatment with kinase inhibitors so that they can combine drugs to block resistance.

 

Gary Johnson, PhD, the project's principal investigator, says, "Single-agent kinase inhibitors are promising in principle, but often fail in practice because the network of tumour kinases learns how to get around the inhibitor, leading to rapid drug resistance. We're very excited about the test our lab has developed because it works very well in a model of breast cancer to predict the success of combination therapies."

 

Johnson, who is the Kenan Distinguished Professor and chair of the department of pharmacology in the UNC School of Medicine and a member of UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, is working with UNC Breast Center medical director Lisa Carey, MD, UNC Lineberger director Shelley Earp, MD, and surgical oncologist Keith Amos, MD, to perform clinical trials using the technology with the goal of real-time, personalised therapies for breast cancer.

 

"One of the most frustrating things as an oncologist is when a patient's tumour develops resistance to a treatment," says Carey, who is also a member of UNC Lineberger. "We are excited about the ability to examine tumour samples before, during, and after kinase inhibitor treatment to see how the tumour kinase profile changes, and potentially respond to those changes using different inhibitors."

 

The team hopes to be able to track and define the kinase 'reprogramming' that takes place in tumours during therapy and to use the new test to identify combinations of drugs that will block the cancer's adaptive behavior that leads to drug resistance. A patent application has been filed for the testing technology.

 

Source: University of North Carolina School of Medicine