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Recurrent cancer-associated ERBB4 mutations are transforming and confer resistance to targeted therapies.

Molecular oncology 2025

Ojala VK, Ahonen S, Peltola S, Tuohisto-Kokko A, Esparta O, Suominen P, Jokilammi A, Farahani I, Chakroborty D, Dibus N, Boettcher S, Airenne TT, Johnson MS, Eli LD, Elenius K, Kurppa KJ

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Receptor tyrosine kinase ERBB4 (HER4) is frequently mutated in human cancer, and ERBB4 mutations have been identified in patients relapsing on targeted therapy.

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APA Ojala VK, Ahonen S, et al. (2025). Recurrent cancer-associated ERBB4 mutations are transforming and confer resistance to targeted therapies.. Molecular oncology. https://doi.org/10.1002/1878-0261.70189
MLA Ojala VK, et al.. "Recurrent cancer-associated ERBB4 mutations are transforming and confer resistance to targeted therapies.." Molecular oncology, 2025.
PMID 41437739

Abstract

Receptor tyrosine kinase ERBB4 (HER4) is frequently mutated in human cancer, and ERBB4 mutations have been identified in patients relapsing on targeted therapy. Here, we addressed the functional consequences of recurrent cancer-associated ERBB4 mutations that are located at regions important for receptor activation and/or are paralogous to known oncogenic hotspot mutations in other ERBB genes. Eleven out of 18 analyzed mutations were transforming in cell models, thus suggesting oncogenic potential for more than half of the recurrent ERBB4 mutations. More detailed analyses of the most potent mutations, S303F, E452K, and L798R, showed that they are activating, can co-operate with other ERBB receptors and are sensitive to clinically available second-generation pan-ERBB inhibitors neratinib, afatinib, and dacomitinib. Furthermore, the S303F mutation, together with a previously identified activating ERBB4 mutation, E715K, promoted resistance to third-generation EGFR inhibitor osimertinib in EGFR-mutant lung cancer model in vitro and in vivo. Together, these results are expected to facilitate clinical interpretation of the most recurrent cancer-associated ERBB4 mutations. The findings provide rationale for testing the efficacy of clinically used pan-ERBB inhibitors in patients harboring driver ERBB4 mutations both in the treatment-naïve setting, and upon development of resistance to targeted agents.