ABSTRACT
The KRAS gene is mutated in approximately 45% of colorectal cancer patients. There are currently very few targeted treatments or therapies equipped to directly inhibit KRAS due to its unusual structural intricacies. Erlotinib, an EGFR inhibitor, has previously been demonstrated to reduce cell viability by inducing autophagy in lung cancer cell lines with varying EGFR mutations. In contrast to lung cancer cells, evidence is provided herein for the first time that erlotinib treatment in colorectal cancer (CRC) cell lines reduces autophagy and still results in decreased cell viability. However, the effects of erlotinib in CRC cell lines containing a wildtype KRAS gene were different than in cells carrying a mutant KRAS gene. We show that there is significantly more downregulation of autophagy in KRAS mutant CRC cells compared to KRAS wildtype cells, both at transcriptional and translational levels, suggesting that the KRAS mutation is advantageous for cancer growth, even in the presence of erlotinib. Cell viability results determined that KRAS wildtype CRC cells had significantly more cell death compared to KRAS mutant cells. Using patient mRNA datasets, we showed that there was a significant correlation between the presence of the KRAS mutation and the expression of autophagy proteins. Additionally, through molecular dynamics simulations, we develop a blueprint for KRAS and autophagy protein interaction and the impact of the KRAS mutation on autophagy protein regulation. Overall, this is the first report of erlotinib treatment in CRC cells that assesses autophagy, and we demonstrate that autophagy activity is downregulated in these cells. This effect is not only greater in cells carrying a KRAS mutation compared to wildtype cells, but the KRAS mutant cells also have increased cell viability compared to wildtype cells. We hypothesize that the difference in cell viability and autophagy expression between KRAS mutant and KRAS wildtype cells after treatment with erlotinib can be of therapeutic value to treat CRC patients carrying KRAS mutations.
ABSTRACT
SMARCA4 is a gene traditionally considered a tumor suppressor. Recent research has however found that SMARCA4 likely promotes cancer growth and is a good target for cancer treatment. The drug carbamazepine, an autophagy inducer, was used on colorectal cancer cell lines, HCT1116 and Hke3 (KRAS mutant and wildtype). Our study finds that Carbamazepine affects SMARCA4 levels and that this effect is different depending on the KRAS mutation status. This study analyzes the effect of carbamazepine on early-stage autophagy via ULK1 as well as simulates the docking of carbamazepine on KRAS, depending on the mutation status. Our study highlights the therapeutic uses of carbamazepine on cancer, and we propose that carbamazepine in conjunction with other chemotherapies may prove useful in targeting KRAS-mutated colorectal cancer.