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Drug mechanism-of-action discovery through the integration of pharmacological and CRISPR screens.

Emanuel GonçalvesAldo Segura-CabreraClare PaciniGabriele PiccoFiona M BehanPatricia JaaksElizabeth A CokerDonny van der MeerAndrew BarthorpeHoward LightfootTatiana MironenkoAlexandra BeckLaura RichardsonWanjuan YangErmira LleshiJames HallCharlotte TolleyCaitlin HallIman MaliFrances ThomasJames MorrisAndrew R LeachJames T LynchBen SiddersClaire CrafterFrancesco IorioStephen FawellMathew J Garnett
Published in: Molecular systems biology (2021)
Low success rates during drug development are due, in part, to the difficulty of defining drug mechanism-of-action and molecular markers of therapeutic activity. Here, we integrated 199,219 drug sensitivity measurements for 397 unique anti-cancer drugs with genome-wide CRISPR loss-of-function screens in 484 cell lines to systematically investigate cellular drug mechanism-of-action. We observed an enrichment for positive associations between the profile of drug sensitivity and knockout of a drug's nominal target, and by leveraging protein-protein networks, we identified pathways underpinning drug sensitivity. This revealed an unappreciated positive association between mitochondrial E3 ubiquitin-protein ligase MARCH5 dependency and sensitivity to MCL1 inhibitors in breast cancer cell lines. We also estimated drug on-target and off-target activity, informing on specificity, potency and toxicity. Linking drug and gene dependency together with genomic data sets uncovered contexts in which molecular networks when perturbed mediate cancer cell loss-of-fitness and thereby provide independent and orthogonal evidence of biomarkers for drug development. This study illustrates how integrating cell line drug sensitivity with CRISPR loss-of-function screens can elucidate mechanism-of-action to advance drug development.
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