Molecular Medicine Israel

Differential network analysis of ROS1 inhibitors reveals lorlatinib polypharmacology through co-targeting PYK2

Highlights

  • Differential network analysis identifies functionally relevant secondary targets
  • Chemoproteomic binding potencies enhance selectively affected target identification
  • Lorlatinib shows polypharmacology in ROS1+ lung cancer by targeting ROS1 and PYK2
  • Multi-targeting of the ROS1/PYK2/SRC signaling complex leads to pronounced synergy

Summary

Multiple tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) are often developed for the same indication. However, their relative overall efficacy is frequently incompletely understood and they may harbor unrecognized targets that cooperate with the intended target. We compared several ROS1 TKIs for inhibition of ROS1-fusion-positive lung cancer cell viability, ROS1 autophosphorylation and kinase activity, which indicated disproportionately higher cellular potency of one TKI, lorlatinib. Quantitative chemical and phosphoproteomics across four ROS1 TKIs and differential network analysis revealed that lorlatinib uniquely impacted focal adhesion signaling. Functional validation using pharmacological probes, RNA interference, and CRISPR-Cas9 knockout uncovered a polypharmacology mechanism of lorlatinib by dual targeting ROS1 and PYK2, which form a multiprotein complex with SRC. Rational multi-targeting of this complex by combining lorlatinib with SRC inhibitors exhibited pronounced synergy. Taken together, we show that systems pharmacology-based differential network analysis can dissect mixed canonical/non-canonical polypharmacology mechanisms across multiple TKIs enabling the design of rational drug combinations.

Sign up for our Newsletter