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Functional genomics reveals that a divergent genetic dependency signature is not essential to the synergism of molecular-targeted agent and chemotherapeutic combinations in gastric cancer cells.

bioRxiv 2023 October 11
UNLABELLED: The rational combination of anticancer agents is critical to improving patient outcomes in cancer. Nonetheless, most combination regimens in the clinic result from empirical methodologies disregarding insight into the mechanism of action and missing the opportunity to improve therapy outcomes incrementally. Deciphering the genetic dependencies and vulnerabilities responsible for synergistic interactions is crucial for rationally developing effective anticancer drug combinations. Hence, we screened pairwise pharmacological interactions between molecular-targeted agents and conventional chemotherapeutics and examined the genome-scale genetic dependencies in gastric adenocarcinoma cell models. Since this type of cancer is mainly chemoresistant and incurable, clinical situations demand effective combination strategies. Our pairwise combination screen revealed SN38/erlotinib as the drug pair with the most robust synergism. Genome-wide CRISPR screening and a shRNA-based signature assay indicated that the genetic dependency/vulnerability signature of SN38/erlotinib was not divergent from that of SN38 alone. Additional investigation revealed that the enhanced cell death with improved death kinetics caused by the SN38/erlotinib combination is surprisingly due to erlotinib's off-target effect that inhibits ABCG2, not its on-target effect on EGFR. These findings demonstrate the importance of assessing off-target effects in addition to the perceived on-target effects of a drug. Our results confirm that a genetic dependency signature different from the single-drug application may not be necessary for the synergistic interaction of molecular-targeted agents with conventional chemotherapeutics in gastric adenocarcinoma. The findings also demonstrated the efficacy of functional genomics approaches in unveiling biologically validated mechanisms of pharmacological interactions.

SIGNIFICANCE: Functional genomics approaches efficiently demonstrated that a divergence in genetic dependency/vulnerability signature is not essential for the synergistic interaction of molecular-targeted agents and conventional chemotherapeutic combinations in gastric adenocarcinoma.

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