Jakob Schöttle
Max Planck Society
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Featured researches published by Jakob Schöttle.
Science Translational Medicine | 2010
Jonathan M. Weiss; Martin L. Sos; Danila Seidel; Martin Peifer; Thomas Zander; Johannes M. Heuckmann; Roland T. Ullrich; Roopika Menon; Sebastian Maier; Alex Soltermann; Holger Moch; Patrick Wagener; Florian Fischer; Stefanie Heynck; Mirjam Koker; Jakob Schöttle; Frauke Leenders; Franziska Gabler; Ines Dabow; Silvia Querings; Lukas C. Heukamp; Hyatt Balke-Want; Sascha Ansén; Daniel Rauh; Ingelore Baessmann; Janine Altmüller; Zoe Wainer; Matthew Conron; Gavin Wright; Prudence A. Russell
FGFR1 amplification provides a therapeutic target for squamous cell lung cancer, which is resistant to other targeted lung cancer drugs. A Smoking Gun for Lung Cancer Detectives and scientists alike need strong evidence to take their cases to the judge, who for scientists is often a patient with a deadly disease. Yet, new culprits are sometimes found that can break a case wide open. Lung cancer, which accounts for more than 10% of the global cancer burden, has a poor prognosis and inadequately responds to chemotherapy and radiotherapy. New targeted treatments for lung adenocarcinomas inhibit the oncogenic versions of signaling protein kinases that arise from mutations typically found in lung cancer patients who have never smoked. However, smokers frequently suffer from a different deviant, squamous cell lung cancers, for which there are no known molecular genetic targets for therapy. Now, Weiss et al. have fingered a new suspect in smoking-related lung cancer: amplification of the FGFR1 gene, which encodes the fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 tyrosine kinase (FGFR1). To identify therapeutically viable genetic alterations that may influence squamous cell lung cancer, Weiss et al. performed genomic profiles on a large set of lung cancer specimens. Squamous cell lung cancer samples showed FGFR1 amplification, which was not found in other lung cancer subtypes. The authors then determined that a molecule that broadly inhibits FGF receptor function could block tumor growth and cause cell death in the cancers that expressed high amounts of the FGFR1 gene product in a manner that was dependent on FGFR1 expression. Moreover, FGFR1 inhibition resulted in a considerable decrease in tumor size in a mouse model of FGFR1-amplified lung cancer. This culmination of evidence implies that inhibition of this receptor tyrosine kinase should be explored as a candidate therapy for corralling squamous cell lung cancer in smokers. Lung cancer remains one of the leading causes of cancer-related death in developed countries. Although lung adenocarcinomas with EGFR mutations or EML4-ALK fusions respond to treatment by epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) inhibition, respectively, squamous cell lung cancer currently lacks therapeutically exploitable genetic alterations. We conducted a systematic search in a set of 232 lung cancer specimens for genetic alterations that were therapeutically amenable and then performed high-resolution gene copy number analyses. We identified frequent and focal fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 (FGFR1) amplification in squamous cell lung cancer (n = 155), but not in other lung cancer subtypes, and, by fluorescence in situ hybridization, confirmed the presence of FGFR1 amplifications in an independent cohort of squamous cell lung cancer samples (22% of cases). Using cell-based screening with the FGFR inhibitor PD173074 in a large (n = 83) panel of lung cancer cell lines, we demonstrated that this compound inhibited growth and induced apoptosis specifically in those lung cancer cells carrying amplified FGFR1. We validated the FGFR1 dependence of FGFR1-amplified cell lines by FGFR1 knockdown and by ectopic expression of an FGFR1-resistant allele (FGFR1V561M), which rescued FGFR1-amplified cells from PD173074-mediated cytotoxicity. Finally, we showed that inhibition of FGFR1 with a small molecule led to significant tumor shrinkage in vivo. Thus, focal FGFR1 amplification is common in squamous cell lung cancer and associated with tumor growth and survival, suggesting that FGFR inhibitors may be a viable therapeutic option in this cohort of patients.
Cancer Discovery | 2014
Lynnette Fernandez-Cuesta; Dennis Plenker; Hirotaka Osada; Ruping Sun; Roopika Menon; Frauke Leenders; Sandra Ortiz-Cuaran; Martin Peifer; Marc Bos; J. Dassler; Florian Malchers; Jakob Schöttle; W. Vogel; Ilona Dahmen; Mirjam Koker; Roland T. Ullrich; Gavin Wright; Prue Russell; Zoe Wainer; Benjamin Solomon; E. Brambilla; H. Nagy-Mignotte; Denis Moro-Sibilot; Christian Brambilla; Sylvie Lantuejoul; Janine Altmüller; Christian Becker; Peter Nürnberg; Johannes M. Heuckmann; Erich Stoelben
UNLABELLED We discovered a novel somatic gene fusion, CD74-NRG1, by transcriptome sequencing of 25 lung adenocarcinomas of never smokers. By screening 102 lung adenocarcinomas negative for known oncogenic alterations, we found four additional fusion-positive tumors, all of which were of the invasive mucinous subtype. Mechanistically, CD74-NRG1 leads to extracellular expression of the EGF-like domain of NRG1 III-β3, thereby providing the ligand for ERBB2-ERBB3 receptor complexes. Accordingly, ERBB2 and ERBB3 expression was high in the index case, and expression of phospho-ERBB3 was specifically found in tumors bearing the fusion (P < 0.0001). Ectopic expression of CD74-NRG1 in lung cancer cell lines expressing ERBB2 and ERBB3 activated ERBB3 and the PI3K-AKT pathway, and led to increased colony formation in soft agar. Thus, CD74-NRG1 gene fusions are activating genomic alterations in invasive mucinous adenocarcinomas and may offer a therapeutic opportunity for a lung tumor subtype with, so far, no effective treatment. SIGNIFICANCE CD74–NRG1 fusions may represent a therapeutic opportunity for invasive mucinous lung adenocarcinomas, a tumor with no effective treatment that frequently presents with multifocal unresectable disease.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2013
Sampurna Chatterjee; Lukas C. Heukamp; Maike Siobal; Jakob Schöttle; Caroline Wieczorek; Martin Peifer; Davide Frasca; Mirjam Koker; Katharina König; Lydia Meder; Daniel Rauh; Reinhard Buettner; Johanna Wolf; Rolf A. Brekken; Bernd Neumaier; Gerhard Christofori; Roman K. Thomas; Roland T. Ullrich
The molecular mechanisms that control the balance between antiangiogenic and proangiogenic factors and initiate the angiogenic switch in tumors remain poorly defined. By combining chemical genetics with multimodal imaging, we have identified an autocrine feed-forward loop in tumor cells in which tumor-derived VEGF stimulates VEGF production via VEGFR2-dependent activation of mTOR, substantially amplifying the initial proangiogenic signal. Disruption of this feed-forward loop by chemical perturbation or knockdown of VEGFR2 in tumor cells dramatically inhibited production of VEGF in vitro and in vivo. This disruption was sufficient to prevent tumor growth in vivo. In patients with lung cancer, we found that this VEGF:VEGFR2 feed-forward loop was active, as the level of VEGF/VEGFR2 binding in tumor cells was highly correlated to tumor angiogenesis. We further demonstrated that inhibition of tumor cell VEGFR2 induces feedback activation of the IRS/MAPK signaling cascade. Most strikingly, combined pharmacological inhibition of VEGFR2 (ZD6474) and MEK (PD0325901) in tumor cells resulted in dramatic tumor shrinkage, whereas monotherapy only modestly slowed tumor growth. Thus, a tumor cell-autonomous VEGF:VEGFR2 feed-forward loop provides signal amplification required for the establishment of fully angiogenic tumors in lung cancer. Interrupting this feed-forward loop switches tumor cells from an angiogenic to a proliferative phenotype that sensitizes tumor cells to MAPK inhibition.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012
Martin L. Sos; Felix Dietlein; Martin Peifer; Jakob Schöttle; Hyatt Balke-Want; Christian Müller; Mirjam Koker; André Richters; Stefanie Heynck; Florian Malchers; Johannes M. Heuckmann; Danila Seidel; Patrick A. Eyers; Roland T. Ullrich; Andrey P. Antonchick; Viktor V. Vintonyak; Peter M. Schneider; Takashi Ninomiya; Herbert Waldmann; Reinhard Büttner; Daniel Rauh; Lukas C. Heukamp; Roman K. Thomas
Small cell lung cancer (SCLC) accounts for about 15% of all lung cancers. The prognosis of SCLC patients is devastating and no biologically targeted therapeutics are active in this tumor type. To develop a framework for development of specific SCLC-targeted drugs we conducted a combined genomic and pharmacological vulnerability screen in SCLC cell lines. We show that SCLC cell lines capture the genomic landscape of primary SCLC tumors and provide genetic predictors for activity of clinically relevant inhibitors by screening 267 compounds across 44 of these cell lines. We show Aurora kinase inhibitors are effective in SCLC cell lines bearing MYC amplification, which occur in 3–7% of SCLC patients. In MYC-amplified SCLC cells Aurora kinase inhibition associates with G2/M-arrest, inactivation of PI3-kinase (PI3K) signaling, and induction of apoptosis. Aurora dependency in SCLC primarily involved Aurora B, required its kinase activity, and was independent of depletion of cytoplasmic levels of MYC. Our study suggests that a fraction of SCLC patients may benefit from therapeutic inhibition of Aurora B. Thus, thorough chemical and genomic exploration of SCLC cell lines may provide starting points for further development of rational targeted therapeutic intervention in this deadly tumor type.
Cancer Discovery | 2014
Florian Malchers; Felix Dietlein; Jakob Schöttle; Lu X; Nogova L; Albus K; Lynnette Fernandez-Cuesta; Johannes M. Heuckmann; Gautschi O; Joachim Diebold; Plenker D; Gardizi M; Matthias Scheffler; Bos M; Danila Seidel; Leenders F; Richters A; Martin Peifer; Florin A; Mainkar Ps; Karre N; Chandrasekhar S; George J; Silling S; Rauh D; Thomas Zander; Roland T. Ullrich; Reinhardt Hc; Ringeisen F; Reinhard Büttner
UNLABELLED The 8p12 locus (containing the FGFR1 tyrosine kinase gene) is frequently amplified in squamous cell lung cancer. However, it is currently unknown which of the 8p12-amplified tumors are also sensitive to fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR) inhibition. We found that, in contrast with other recurrent amplifications, the 8p12 region included multiple centers of amplification, suggesting marked genomic heterogeneity. FGFR1-amplified tumor cells were dependent on FGFR ligands in vitro and in vivo. Furthermore, ectopic expression of FGFR1 was oncogenic, which was enhanced by expression of MYC. We found that MYC was coexpressed in 40% of FGFR1-amplified tumors. Tumor cells coexpressing MYC were more sensitive to FGFR inhibition, suggesting that patients with FGFR1-amplified and MYC-overexpressing tumors may benefit from FGFR inhibitor therapy. Thus, both cell-autonomous and non-cell-autonomous mechanisms of transformation modulate FGFR dependency in FGFR1-amplified lung cancer, which may have implications for patient selection for treatment with FGFR inhibitors. SIGNIFICANCE Amplification of FGFR1 is one of the most frequent candidate targets in lung cancer. Here, we show that multiple factors affect the tumorigenic potential of FGFR1, thus providing clinical hypotheses for refinement of patient selection.
Genome Biology | 2015
Lynnette Fernandez-Cuesta; Ruping Sun; Roopika Menon; Julie George; Susanne Lorenz; Leonardo A. Meza-Zepeda; Martin Peifer; Dennis Plenker; Johannes M. Heuckmann; Frauke Leenders; Thomas Zander; Ilona Dahmen; Mirjam Koker; Jakob Schöttle; Roland T. Ullrich; Janine Altmüller; Christian Becker; Peter Nürnberg; Henrik Seidel; Diana Böhm; Friederike Göke; Sascha Ansén; Prudence A. Russell; Gavin Wright; Zoe Wainer; Benjamin sss Solomon; Iver Petersen; Joachim H. Clement; Jörg Sänger; Odd-Terje Brustugun
Genomic translocation events frequently underlie cancer development through generation of gene fusions with oncogenic properties. Identification of such fusion transcripts by transcriptome sequencing might help to discover new potential therapeutic targets. We developed TRUP (Tumor-specimen suited RNA-seq Unified Pipeline) (https://github.com/ruping/TRUP), a computational approach that combines split-read and read-pair analysis with de novo assembly for the identification of chimeric transcripts in cancer specimens. We apply TRUP to RNA-seq data of different tumor types, and find it to be more sensitive than alternative tools in detecting chimeric transcripts, such as secondary rearrangements in EML4-ALK-positive lung tumors, or recurrent inactivating rearrangements affecting RASSF8.
Cancer Research | 2014
Sampurna Chatterjee; Caroline Wieczorek; Jakob Schöttle; Maike Siobal; Yvonne Hinze; Thomas Franz; Alexandra Florin; Joanna Adamczak; Lukas C. Heukamp; Bernd Neumaier; Roland T. Ullrich
Extensive oncologic experience argues that the most efficacious applications of antiangiogenic agents rely upon a combination with cytotoxic drugs. Yet there remains a lack of clarity about how to optimize scheduling for such drug combinations. Prudent antiangiogenic therapy might transiently normalize blood vessels to improve tumor oxygenation and drug exposure. Using [(15)O]H2O positron emission tomography imaging in a preclinical mouse model of non-small cell lung cancer, we observed that short-term treatment with the vascular endothelial growth factor receptor/platelet-derived growth factor receptor inhibitor PTK787 licensed a transient window of improved tumor blood flow. The improvement observed was associated with a reduced leakiness from tumor vessels, consistent with induction of a vascular normalization process. Initiation of a cytotoxic treatment in this window of tumor vessel normalization resulted in increased efficacy, as illustrated by improved outcomes of erlotinib administration after initial PTK787 treatment. Notably, intermittent PTK787 treatment also facilitated long-term tumor regression. In summary, our findings offer strong evidence that short-term antiangiogenic therapy can promote a transient vessel normalization process that improves the delivery and efficacy of a targeted cytotoxic drug.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2013
Sampurna Chatterjee; Lukas C. Heukamp; Maike Siobal; Jakob Schöttle; Caroline Wieczorek; Martin Peifer; Davide Frasca; Mirjam Koker; Katharina König; Lydia Meder; Daniel Rauh; Reinhard Buettner; Jürgen Wolf; Rolf A. Brekken; Bernd Neumaier; Gerhard Christofori; Roman K. Thomas; Roland T. Ullrich
The molecular mechanisms that control the balance between antiangiogenic and proangiogenic factors and initiate the angiogenic switch in tumors remain poorly defined. By combining chemical genetics with multimodal imaging, we have identified an autocrine feed-forward loop in tumor cells in which tumor-derived VEGF stimulates VEGF production via VEGFR2-dependent activation of mTOR, substantially amplifying the initial proangiogenic signal. Disruption of this feed-forward loop by chemical perturbation or knockdown of VEGFR2 in tumor cells dramatically inhibited production of VEGF in vitro and in vivo. This disruption was sufficient to prevent tumor growth in vivo. In patients with lung cancer, we found that this VEGF:VEGFR2 feed-forward loop was active, as the level of VEGF/VEGFR2 binding in tumor cells was highly correlated to tumor angiogenesis. We further demonstrated that inhibition of tumor cell VEGFR2 induces feedback activation of the IRS/MAPK signaling cascade. Most strikingly, combined pharmacological inhibition of VEGFR2 (ZD6474) and MEK (PD0325901) in tumor cells resulted in dramatic tumor shrinkage, whereas monotherapy only modestly slowed tumor growth. Thus, a tumor cell-autonomous VEGF:VEGFR2 feed-forward loop provides signal amplification required for the establishment of fully angiogenic tumors in lung cancer. Interrupting this feed-forward loop switches tumor cells from an angiogenic to a proliferative phenotype that sensitizes tumor cells to MAPK inhibition.
Oncotarget | 2015
Jakob Schöttle; Sampurna Chatterjee; Caroline Volz; Maike Siobal; Alexandra Florin; Dennis Rokitta; Yvonne Hinze; Felix Dietlein; Dennis Plenker; Katharina König; Kerstin Albus; Johannes M. Heuckmann; Daniel Rauh; Thomas Franz; Bernd Neumaier; Uwe Fuhr; Lukas C. Heukamp; Roland T. Ullrich
Treatment with EGFR kinase inhibitors improves progression-free survival of patients with EGFR-mutant lung cancer. However, all patients with initial response will eventually acquire resistance and die from tumor recurrence. We found that intermittent high-dose treatment with erlotinib induced apoptosis more potently and improved tumor shrinkage significantly than the established low doses. In mice carrying EGFR-mutant xenografts intermittent high-dose treatment (200 mg/kg every other day) was tolerable and prolonged progression-free survival and reduced the frequency of acquired resistance. Intermittent EGFR-targeted high-dose schedules induce more profound as well as sustained target inhibition and may afford enhanced therapeutic efficacy.
Cancer Research | 2014
Sandra Ortiz-Cuaran; Jakob Schöttle; Ilona Dahmen; Martin Peifer; Caroline Wieczoreck; Mirjam Koker; Michaela Angelika Ihle; Alexandra Florin; Berit Pinther; Lukas C. Heukamp; Roland T. Ullrich; Roman K. Thomas
In lung adenocarcinomas, targeted therapy with the EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) erlotinib and gefitinib is associated with longer progression free survival (PFS). However, despite the initial success, all patients progress with a median PFS of 12 to 16 months. Acquired resistance is driven by the occurrence of a secondary EGFR mutation (T790M) in about 50% of the cases and by c-Met amplification in 5 to 10 % of the cases. We report the activity of a new reversible and ATP-competitive c-Met inhibitor, EMD1214063, in the setting of primary lung adenocarcinomas harboring EGFR activating mutations and in two models of acquired resistance. EMD1214063 showed to be specifically active in c-Met amplified and c-Met dependent cells in a large panel of genotypically characterized lung cancer cell lines. In the context of acquired resistance, we studied the effect of EMD1214063 alone and in combination of afatinib, an irreversible EGFR TKI, in PC9 cells (EGFR Exon19del), H1975 cells (EGFR L858R and T790M), HCC827 (EGFR Exon19del, not c-Met amplified) and in HCC827GR cells (EGFR Exon19del and c-Met amplified). Treatment of HCC827GR cells with EMD1214063 resulted in substantial growth inhibition and induced apoptosis. The in vitro results showed a significant synergistic effect of the combination of EMD121039 and afatinib in the induction of growth inhibition in the context of c-Met amplification and EGFR T790M mutation. Combination treatment robustly suppressed expression of downstream pErk and pAkt, showing efficient suppression of PI3K and MAPK signaling. To determine whether the antitumor activity of the combination observed in vitro might also be apparent in vivo, we injected these cells in nude mice to elicit the formation of solid tumors. Mice were treated with EMD121043 (25mg/kg), afatinib (10mg/kg) or the combination of both. In H1975 xenografts only the combination therapy could significantly reduce tumor growth, thus confirming the results obtained in vitro. In the c-Met amplified setting, we treated mice harboring HCC827, HCC827GR and mixed xenografts. HCC827-driven tumors strongly responded to both afatinib monotherapy and to the combination, leading to complete remission within 40 days of therapy. HCC827/HCC827GR mixed xenografts containing 0.1%, 1% and 10% of HCC827GR cells partially responded to afatinib monotherapy; however, growth was completely abolished by combination therapy. Treatment with EMD1214063 led to significant growth reduction in mice harboring HCC827GR tumors. In this model, only the combination therapy led to massive tumor shrinkage. Assessment of cell proliferation in vivo by [18F]FLT-PET showed a decline in FLT-uptake of 40% in both the combination therapy and the EMD1214063 monotherapy. In conclusion, the combination of EMD1214063 and afatinib promote tumor regression in erlotinib acquired resistant lung cancers driven by EGFR L858R/T790M or EGFR Exon19 del/c-Met amplification. Citation Format: Sandra Ortiz-Cuaran, Jakob Schottle, Ilona Dahmen, Martin Peifer, Caroline Wieczoreck, Mirjam Koker, Michaela A. Ihle, Alexandra Florin, Berit Pinther, Lukas C. Heukamp, Roland T. Ullrich, Roman K. Thomas. Attacking EGFR mutant lung cancer by combined EGFR and c-Met inhibition. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 105th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2014 Apr 5-9; San Diego, CA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2014;74(19 Suppl):Abstract nr 1690. doi:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2014-1690