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  • Immuno-PET Detects Changes in Multi-RTK Tumor Cell Expression Levels in Response to Targeted Kinase Inhibition.

Immuno-PET Detects Changes in Multi-RTK Tumor Cell Expression Levels in Response to Targeted Kinase Inhibition.

Journal of nuclear medicine : official publication, Society of Nuclear Medicine (2020-07-11)
Patricia M R Pereira, Jalen Norfleet, Jason S Lewis, Freddy E Escorcia
ABSTRACT

Receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) coexpression facilitates tumor resistance due to redundancies in the phosphatidylinositol-3'-kinase/protein kinase B and KRAS/extracellular-signal-regulated kinase signaling pathways, among others. Crosstalk between the oncogenic RTK hepatocyte growth factor receptor (MET), epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) are involved in tumor resistance to RTK-targeted therapies. Methods: In a relevant renal cell carcinoma patient-derived xenograft model, we use the 89Zr-labeled anti-RTK antibodies (immuno-PET) onartuzumab, panitumumab, and trastuzumab to monitor MET, EGFR, and HER2 protein levels, respectively, during treatment with agents to which the model was resistant (cetuximab) or sensitive (INC280 and trametinib). Results: Cetuximab treatment resulted in continued tumor growth, as well as an increase in all RTK protein levels at the tumor in vivo on immuno-PET and ex vivo at the cellular level. Conversely, after dual MET/mitogen-activated protein kinase inhibition, tumor growth was significantly blunted and corresponded to a decrease in RTK levels. Conclusion: These data show the utility of RTK-targeted immuno-PET to annotate RTK changes in protein expression and inform tumor response to targeted therapies.

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Anti-β-Actin antibody, Mouse monoclonal, clone AC-15, purified from hybridoma cell culture