Towards pathway-centric cancer therapies via pharmacogenomic profiling analysis of ERK signalling pathway

Clin Transl Med. 2015 Dec;4(1):66. doi: 10.1186/s40169-015-0066-1. Epub 2015 Jul 28.

Abstract

Background: Genomic heterogeneity in human cancers complicates gene-centric personalized medicine. Malignant tumors often share a core group of pathways that are perturbed by diverse genetic mutations. Therefore, one possible solution to overcome the heterogeneity challenge is a shift from gene-centric to pathway-centric therapies. Pathway-centric perspectives, which underscore the need to understand key pathways and their critical properties, could address the complexity of cancer heterogeneity better than gene-centric approaches to aid cancer drug discovery and therapy.

Methods: We used large-scale pharmacogenomic profiling data provided by the Cancer Genome Project of the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute and the Cancer Cell Line Encyclopedia. In a systematic in silico investigation of ERK signalling pathway components and topological structures determines their influences on pathway activity and targeted therapies. Mann-Whitney U test was used to identify gene alterations associated with drug sensitivity with p values and Benjamini-Hochberg correction for multiple hypotheses testing.

Results: The analysis demonstrated that genetic alterations were crucial to activation of effector pathway and subsequent tumorigenesis, however drug sensitivity suffered from both drug effector and non-effector pathways, which were determined by not only underlying genomic alterations, but also interplay and topological relationship of components in pathway, suggesting that the combinatorial targets of key nodes in perturbed pathways may yield better treatment outcome. Furthermore, we proposed a model to provide a more comprehensive insight and understanding of pathway-centric cancer therapies.

Conclusions: Our study provides a holistic view of factors influencing drug sensitivity and sheds light on pathway-centric cancer therapies.