Synthetic Lethal Interaction of SHOC2 Depletion with MEK Inhibition in RAS-Driven Cancers.

Journal: Cell Reports
Published:
Abstract

The mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway is a critical effector of oncogenic RAS signaling, and MAPK pathway inhibition may be an effective combination treatment strategy. We performed genome-scale loss-of-function CRISPR-Cas9 screens in the presence of a MEK1/2 inhibitor (MEKi) in KRAS-mutant pancreatic and lung cancer cell lines and identified genes that cooperate with MEK inhibition. While we observed heterogeneity in genetic modifiers of MEKi sensitivity across cell lines, several recurrent classes of synthetic lethal vulnerabilities emerged at the pathway level. Multiple members of receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK)-RAS-MAPK pathways scored as sensitizers to MEKi. In particular, we demonstrate that knockout, suppression, or degradation of SHOC2, a positive regulator of MAPK signaling, specifically cooperated with MEK inhibition to impair proliferation in RAS-driven cancer cells. The depletion of SHOC2 disrupted survival pathways triggered by feedback RTK signaling in response to MEK inhibition. Thus, these findings nominate SHOC2 as a potential target for combination therapy.

Authors
Rita Sulahian, Jason Kwon, Katherine Walsh, Emma Pailler, Timothy Bosse, Maneesha Thaker, Diego Almanza, Joshua Dempster, Joshua Pan, Federica Piccioni, Nancy Dumont, Alfredo Gonzalez, Jonathan Rennhack, Behnam Nabet, John Bachman, Amy Goodale, Yenarae Lee, Mukta Bagul, Rosy Liao, Adrija Navarro, Tina Yuan, Raymond W Ng, Srivatsan Raghavan, Nathanael Gray, Aviad Tsherniak, Francisca Vazquez, David Root, Ari Firestone, Jeff Settleman, William Hahn, Andrew Aguirre