Common and cell-type specific responses to anti-cancer drugs revealed by high throughput transcript profiling.

Nat Commun
Authors
Keywords
Abstract

More effective use of targeted anti-cancer drugs depends on elucidating the connection between the molecular states induced by drug treatment and the cellular phenotypes controlled by these states, such as cytostasis and death. This is particularly true when mutation of a single gene is inadequate as a predictor of drug response. The current paper describes a data set of ~600 drug cell line pairs collected as part of the NIH LINCS Program ( ) in which molecular data (reduced dimensionality transcript L1000 profiles) were recorded across dose and time in parallel with phenotypic data on cellular cytostasis and cytotoxicity. We report that transcriptional and phenotypic responses correlate with each other in general, but whereas inhibitors of chaperones and cell cycle kinases induce similar transcriptional changes across cell lines, changes induced by drugs that inhibit intra-cellular signaling kinases are cell-type specific. In some drug/cell line pairs significant changes in transcription are observed without a change in cell growth or survival; analysis of such pairs identifies drug equivalence classes and, in one case, synergistic drug interactions. In this case, synergy involves cell-type specific suppression of an adaptive drug response.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
Nat Commun
Volume
8
Issue
1
Pages
1186
Date Published
2017 10 30
ISSN
2041-1723
DOI
10.1038/s41467-017-01383-w
PubMed ID
29084964
PubMed Central ID
PMC5662764
Links
Grant list
U54 CA189201 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
U54 HG006093 / HG / NHGRI NIH HHS / United States
U54 HL127365 / HL / NHLBI NIH HHS / United States
U54 HL127624 / HL / NHLBI NIH HHS / United States