A new, systematic analysis of cancer cells identifies 370 candidate priority drug targets across 27 cancer types, including breast, lung and ovarian cancers.
By looking at multiple layers of functional and genomic information, researchers were able to create an unbiased, panoramic view of what enables cancer cells to grow and survive. They identify new opportunities for cancer therapies in a significant leap towards a new generation of smarter, more effective cancer treatments.
In the most comprehensive study of its kind, researchers from the Wellcome Sanger Institute, Open Targets and their collaborators, pooled together data from 930 cancer cell lines. They then used machine learning methods to find the drug targets that show the most promise for developing new treatments, and the patients who would most benefit from such treatments. This involved assessing the occurrence of these targets in actual patient tumours and linking them to specific biological markers and genetic and molecular features found in the tumours.
The findings, published today (11 January) in Cancer Cell, not only bring researchers one step closer to producing a full Cancer Dependency Map1 of every vulnerability in every type of cancer, but help guide focused efforts to accelerate the development of targeted cancer treatments.
There are many types of cancer that currently lack effective treatments, such as liver and ovarian cancers. Chemotherapy and radiotherapy are effective treatments, but unable to distinguish normal cells from cancerous ones, so can cause damage throughout the entire body with harsh side effects, such as extreme fatigue, nausea and hair loss.
New precision drugs based on the exact genetic mutations that drive the cancer are needed to help the millions of patients diagnosed with some form of cancer each year, responsible for one in six deaths worldwide2. However, drug development has a 90 per cent failure rate3, making it both costly and inefficient.
With over 20,000 potential anti-cancer targets in the genome, determining which are suitable to target for specific types of cancers and patients is a significant challenge.
In this new study, researchers from the Wellcome Sanger Institute and their collaborators set out to narrow down potential drug targets. By analysing data available from the Cancer Dependency Map project, which involved CRISPR technology4 to disrupt every gene inside 930 human cancer lines one at a time, they were able to produce the most comprehensive view of potential new cancer targets to date.
The researchers first identified weaknesses within different cancer types — so-called genetic dependencies, meaning which genes, proteins or cellular processes that cancer cells rely on to survive — that could be harnessed to make new therapies. They then linked those weaknesses to clinical markers to identify patients in which those therapies would be most effective. Finally, they explored how dependency-marker pairs fit into known networks of molecular interactions within cells, providing clues as to how cell biology is disrupted by cancer, and which targets might yield the most effective therapies.
The work provides a clearer understanding of which types of cancer can possibly be treated by existing drug discovery strategies and pinpoint areas where novel and innovative approaches are needed.
The findings underscore the importance of tailoring treatments to the unique characteristics of each cancer, promising more personalised care for patients with fewer side effects in the future.
Dr Francesco Iorio, co-lead author of the study from the Computational Biology Research Centre of Human Technopole, said: “Analysing the largest-ever cancer dependency dataset, we present the most comprehensive map yet of human cancers’ vulnerabilities — their “Achilles heel.” We identify a new list of top-priority targets for potential treatments, along with clues about which patients might benefit the most — all made possible through the design and use of innovative computational and machine intelligence methodologies.”
Dr Mathew Garnett, co-lead author of the study at the Wellcome Sanger Institute and Open Targets, said: “Our work uncovers 370 candidate priority targets for tackling the most prevalent cancers, including breast, lung and colon cancers. This work exploits the latest in genomics and computational biology to understand how we can best target cancer cells. This will help drug developers focus their efforts on the highest value targets to bring new medicines to patients more quickly.”
Dr Marianne Baker, science engagement manager at Cancer Research UK, said: “Two people might have the same type of cancer, but their diseases can behave differently. That is why we need precision medicine. This ambitious work is a compelling example of research informing drug discovery from the start, paving the way for more effective precision cancer therapies. Giving people treatments for their unique cancer can improve the odds of success and help more people affected by cancer live longer, better lives.”
1. The Cancer Dependency Map is an international collaboration between the Wellcome Sanger Institute and the Broad Institute in the United States. The results of the first iteration of the Cancer Dependency Map were published in 2019. The Cancer Dependency Map at the Sanger Institute is a project that aims to assign a dependency to every cancer cell in a patient, which could be exploited to develop new therapies. It is linked with the Open Targets initiative to facilitate new drug target identification. Projects developed by the Open Targets consortium have supported elements of the Cancer Dependency map to facilitate new drug target identification inclusive of this research.
2. https://www.cancerresearchuk.org/health-professional/cancer-statistics/worldwide-cancer
3. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9293739/
4. CRISPR-CAS9 is a tool used to precisely edit DNA.
These data can be accessed on the Sanger Institute’s Cancer Dependency Map website: https://depmap.sanger.ac.uk/