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Molecular Pathophysiology of Thyroid Cell Growth

James A Fagin

1 Collaborator(s)

Funding source

National Cancer Institute (NIH)
The gain-of-function BRAFT1799A mutation is highly prevalent in melanomas and in thyroid cancers. In the latter, BRAF mutations confer poor prognosis. The spectacular early results of clinical trials in patients with metastatic melanoma treated with the selective RAF inhibitor PLX4032 serve as yet another proof that advanced cancers often retain dependency on oncogenic kinases activated in early stages of tumorigenesis. However, response to selective kinase inhibition is not uniform between tumors of different lineages harboring the same mutation (e.g. in BRAF). The mechanisms that account for this are unknown. Data generated during this granting cycle point to important differences in the biology of thyroid cancers initiated by oncogenic BRAF as compared to melanomas, as well as in the response of murine thyroid cancers and human cell lines to MEK and RAF inhibitors. The experiments proposed in this application aim to explore the key determinants of this differential response, and whether thyroid cancers can be sensitized to MAPK inhibition by selectively targeting feedback events that arise after perturbation of the network. For this we will: 1. Examine mechanisms of primary resistance to RAF and MEK inhibitors, and of feedback reactivation of RTK signaling in thyroid cancer cell lines. 2. Identify the profile of RTK activation after acute exposure to MEK or RAF inhibitors in vivo, and determine the effects of suppressing their activity. 3. Explore mechanisms of acquired resistance to the selective RAF inhibitors in BRAF (+) thyroid cancer cell lines, murine thyroid cancers, and in metastatic lesions of BRAF (+) thyroid cancer patients treated with PLX4032.

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