Sotorasib is a pan-RASG12C inhibitor capable of driving clinical response in NRASG12C cancers.
Douglas A RubinsonNoritaka TanakaFerran Fece de la CruzKevin S KapnerMichael H RosenthalBryanna L NordenHaley BarnesSara EhnstromAlvin A Morales-GironLauren K BraisChristopher T LemkeAndrew J AguirreRyan B CorcoranPublished in: Cancer discovery (2024)
KRASG12C inhibitors, like sotorasib and adagrasib, potently and selectively inhibit KRASG12C through a covalent interaction with the mutant cysteine, driving clinical efficacy in KRASG12C tumors. Since amino acid sequences of the three main RAS isoforms-KRAS, NRAS and HRAS-are highly similar, we hypothesized that some KRASG12C inhibitors might also target NRASG12C and/or HRASG12C, which are less common but critical oncogenic driver mutations in some tumors. While some inhibitors, like adagrasib, were highly selective for KRASG12C, others also potently inhibited NRASG12C and/or HRASG12C. Notably, sotorasib was 5-fold more potent against NRASG12C compared to KRASG12C or HRASG12C. Structural and reciprocal mutagenesis studies suggested that differences in isoform-specific binding are mediated by a single amino acid: Histidine-95 in KRAS (Leucine-95 in NRAS). A patient with NRASG12C colorectal cancer treated with sotorasib and the anti-EGFR antibody panitumumab achieved a marked tumor response, demonstrating that sotorasib can be clinically effective in NRASG12C-mutated tumors.