RAS-ON inhibition overcomes clinical resistance to KRAS G12C-OFF covalent blockade

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Abstract

Selective KRASG12C inhibitors have been developed to covalently lock the oncogene in the inactive GDP-bound state. Two of these molecules, sotorasib and adagrasib, are approved for the treatment of adult patients with KRASG12C-mutated previously treated advanced non-small cell lung cancer. Drug treatment imposes selective pressures leading to the outgrowth of drug-resistant variants. Mass sequencing from patients’ biopsies identified a number of acquired KRAS mutations -both in cis and in trans- in resistant tumors. We demonstrate here that disease progression in vivo can also occur due to adaptive mechanisms and increased KRAS-GTP loading. Using the preclinical tool tri-complex KRASG12C-selective covalent inhibitor, RMC-4998 (also known as RM-029), that targets the active GTP-bound (ON) state of the oncogene, we provide a proof-of-concept that the clinical stage KRASG12C(ON) inhibitor RMC-6291 alone or in combination with KRASG12C(OFF) drugs can be an alternative potential therapeutic strategy to circumvent resistance due to increased KRAS-GTP loading.

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Nokin, M. J., Mira, A., Patrucco, E., Ricciuti, B., Cousin, S., Soubeyran, I., … Ambrogio, C. (2024). RAS-ON inhibition overcomes clinical resistance to KRAS G12C-OFF covalent blockade. Nature Communications , 15(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-51828-2

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