Cancer researchJournal Article
15 Nov 2024
Targeting multiple signaling pathways has been proposed as a strategy to overcome resistance to single-pathway inhibition in cancer therapy.
A previous study in epithelial ovarian cancers identified hyperactivity of spleen tyrosine kinase (SYK) and EGFR, which mutually phosphorylate and activate each other.
Given the potential for pharmacologic inhibition of both kinases with clinically available agents, this study aimed to assess the antitumor efficacy of both pharmacologic and genetic SYK and EGFR coinhibition using a multifaceted approach.
We assessed the coinactivation effects in chemoresistant ovarian cancer cell lines, patient-derived organoids, and xenograft models. Dual inhibition of SYK and EGFR in chemoresistant ovarian cancer cells elicited a synergistic antitumor effect.
Notably, the combined inhibition activated the DNA damage response, induced G1 cell-cycle arrest, and promoted apoptosis.
The phosphoproteomic analysis revealed that perturbation of SYK and EGFR signaling induced a significant reduction in both phosphorylated and total protein levels of cell division cycle 6, a crucial initiator of DNA replication.
Together, this study provides preclinical evidence supporting dual inhibition of SYK and EGFR as a promising treatment for chemoresistant ovarian cancer by disrupting DNA synthesis and impairing formation of the prereplication complex.
These findings warrant further clinical investigation to explore the potential of this combination therapy in overcoming drug resistance and improving patient outcomes.
Significance: SYK and EGFR coinhibition exerts synergistic anticancer effects in chemoresistant ovarian cancer, providing a strategy to treat chemotherapy-resistant ovarian cancers using clinically available agents by targeting critical signaling pathways involved in DNA replication.
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