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The protein kinase TNIK: a novel druggable target in Lung Squamous Cell Carcinoma with 3q amplification.
Author(s) -
Ayuso Pedro Torres,
An Elvira,
Ritt Daniel,
Nyswaner Katherine,
Specht Suzanne,
Liang Roger,
Das Sudipto,
Andresson Thorkell,
Turk Benjamin,
Morrison Deborah,
Brognard John
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
the faseb journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.709
H-Index - 277
eISSN - 1530-6860
pISSN - 0892-6638
DOI - 10.1096/fasebj.2020.34.s1.03326
Subject(s) - cancer research , lung cancer , cell culture , biology , medicine , oncology , genetics
Lung squamous cell carcinoma (LSCC) is the second most common type of lung cancer. No precision therapies have been approved for the treatment of LSCC and the genetic drivers of LSCC are unknown in approximately 60% of the cases. As a result, treatment of LSCC is still limited to chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy. Analysis of LSCC samples from the TCGA reveals that nearly 50% of LSCC patients harbor distal amplification of the 3q chromosome that includes the resident protein kinase gene TNIK . Recent studies have pinpointed TNIK as a potential oncogenic driver in cancer cells with distal 3q amplification (Cancer Discov. 2013; 3:1044). However, the therapeutic potential of TNIK in LSCC remains unexplored. To determine if amplified TNIK is a genetic driver in LSCC, we analyzed TNIK expression in a panel of LSCC cell lines. We show that TNIK is overexpressed in LSCC cell lines in comparison with primary lung cells from healthy donors, consistent with observations in patient tumors based on analysis of TCGA data. Furthermore, we demonstrate that TNIK genetic depletion or pharmacological inhibition significantly reduces survival of LSCC cells with 3q amplification in vitro and in in vivo LSCC cell‐line derived mouse xenografts. Importantly, we have generated LSCC patient‐derived xenograft (PDX) mouse models to test TNIK inhibitors and have observed that inhibition of TNIK catalytic activity suppresses tumor growth in LSCC PDX mouse models. To elucidate the molecular mechanisms underpinning TNIK‐driven LSCC cell viability we have used a combination of reverse‐phase protein arrays, motif‐driven screens for proteins with TNIK consensus phosphorylation sites, co‐expression experiments, peptide mapping and mass spectrometry. Through these approaches, we have identified the tumor suppressor MERLIN as a novel TNIK substrate and determined that TNIK phosphorylates MERLIN at multiple sites. In conclusion, we have pinpointed the protein kinase TNIK as a promising therapeutic target in LSCC that maintains survival of LSCC cells through modulation of novel a TNIK‐MERLIN signaling pathway. Support or Funding Information PT‐A has been funded by Foundation Ramon Areces. This work has been supported by grant ZIABC011691 to J.B.