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MET Signaling Pathways, Resistance Mechanisms, and Opportunities for Target Therapies
Journal
International Journal of Molecular Sciences
ISSN
1422-0067
Date Issued
2022
Author(s)
Type
Resource Types::text::journal::journal article
URL Institutional Repository
Abstract
<jats:p>The MET gene, known as MET proto-oncogene receptor tyrosine kinase, was first identified to induce tumor cell migration, invasion, and proliferation/survival through canonical RAS-CDC42-PAK-Rho kinase, RAS-MAPK, PI3K-AKT-mTOR, and β-catenin signaling pathways, and its driver mutations, such as MET gene amplification (METamp) and the exon 14 skipping alterations (METex14), activate cell transformation, cancer progression, and worse patient prognosis, principally in lung cancer through the overactivation of their own oncogenic and MET parallel signaling pathways. Because of this, MET driver alterations have become of interest in lung adenocarcinomas since the FDA approval of target therapies for METamp and METex14 in 2020. However, after using MET target therapies, tumor cells develop adaptative changes, favoring tumor resistance to drugs, the main current challenge to precision medicine. Here, we review a link between the resistance mechanism and MET signaling pathways, which is not only limited to MET. The resistance impacts MET parallel tyrosine kinase receptors and signals shared hubs. Therefore, this information could be relevant in the patient’s mutational profile evaluation before the first target therapy prescription and follow-up to reduce the risk of drug resistance. However, to develop a resistance mechanism to a MET inhibitor, patients must have access to the drugs. For instance, none of the FDA approved MET inhibitors are registered as such in Chile and other developing countries. Constant cross-feeding between basic and clinical research will thus be required to meet future challenges imposed by the acquired resistance to targeted therapies.</jats:p>
Cite this document
Rivas, S., Marín, A., Samtani, S., González-Feliú, E., & Armisén, R. (2022). Met signaling pathways, resistance mechanisms, and opportunities for target therapies. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 23(22), 13898. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms232213898
Dataset(s)
Dataset - MET Signaling Pathways, Resistance Mechanisms, and Opportunities for Target Therapies
Subjects
actionable mutations
;
driver mutations
;
nsclc
;
precision medicine
;
resistance mutations
;
target therapies
;
exons
;
humans
;
lung neoplasms
;
phosphatidylinositol 3-kinases
;
proto-oncogene proteins c-met
;
signal transduction
;
beta catenin
;
cabozantinib
;
capmatinib
;
chloroplast dna
;
crizotinib
;
epidermal growth factor receptor 3
;
focal adhesion kinase
;
gefitinib
;
mammalian target of rapamycin
;
messenger rna
;
mitogen activated protein kinase
;
osimertinib
;
phosphatidylinositol 3 kinase
;
protein kinase b
;
protein tyrosine kinase inhibitor
;
ras protein
;
savolitinib
;
scatter factor receptor
;
tepotinib
;
trametinib
;
tyrosine kinase receptor
;
wnt protein
;
phosphatidylinositol 3 kinase
;
scatter factor receptor
;
cancer resistance
;
cancer survival
;
cell invasion
;
cell motility
;
cell proliferation
;
clinical research
;
clinical trial (topic)
;
developing country
;
dna determination
;
drug approval
;
exon skipping
;
feeding
;
follow up
;
food and drug administration
;
gene amplification
;
gene dosage
;
gene mutation
;
genetic resistance
;
human
;
malignant neoplasm
;
melanoma
;
molecularly targeted therapy
;
mutation
;
non small cell lung cancer
;
personalized medicine
;
phase 2 clinical trial (topic)
;
phase 3 clinical trial (topic)
;
prescription
;
review
;
risk assessment
;
risk factor
;
signal transduction
;
small cell lung cancer
;
treatment indication
;
exon
;
lung tumor
;
metabolism
;
pathology
;
signal transduction
