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November 2020 - Thomas Bauer

Mag. Thomas Bauer, PhD

MedUni Wien RESEARCHER OF THE MONTH November 2020

Hair eruption initiates and commensal skin microbiota aggravate adverse events of anti-EGFR therapy

Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR)–targeted anticancer therapy induces stigmatizing skin toxicities affecting patients’ quality of life and therapy adherence. The lack of mechanistic details underlying these adverse events hampers their management. We found that EGFR/ERK signaling is required in LRIG1-positive stem cells during de novo hair eruption to secure barrier integrity and prevent the invasion of commensal microbiota and inflammatory skin disease. Restoration of epidermal ERK signaling via prophylactic FGF7 treatment or transgenic SOS expression rescues the barrier defect in the absence of EGFR, highlighting a therapeutic anchor point. This study aims to improve the cancer patients´ quality of life and to optimize the efficacy of modern cancer treatment.

Selected Literature

    1. Hair eruption initiates and commensal skin microbiota aggravate adverse events of anti-EGFR therapy.
      Klufa J *, Bauer T *,+, Hanson B, Herbold G, Starkl P, Lichtenberger B, Srutkova D, Schulz D, Vujic I, Mohr T, Rappersberger K, Bodenmiller B, Kozakova H, Knapp S, Loy A, Sibilia M+.
      Sci Transl Med. 2019 Dec 11: eaax2693; *equal contribution, +corresponding author
    2. Epidermal EGFR controls cutaneous host defense and prevents inflammation.
      Lichtenberger BM *, Gerber PA *, Holcmann M *, Buhren BA, Amberg N, Smolle V, Schrumpf H, Boelke E, Ansari P, Mackenzie C, Wollenberg A, Kislat A, Fischer JW, Röck K, Harder J, Schröder JM, Homey B *, Sibilia M *.
      Sci Transl Med. 2013 Aug 21;5(199):199ra111. *equal contribution
    3. Identification of Axl as a downstream effector of TGF-β1 during Langerhans cell differentiation and epidermal homeostasis.
      Bauer T, Zagórska A, Jurkin J, Yasmin N, Köffel R, Richter S, Gesslbauer B, Lemke G, Strobl H.
      J Exp Med. 2012 Oct 22;209(11):2033-47



    Dr. Thomas Bauer

    Mag. Thomas Bauer, PhD
    Medizinische Universität Wien
    Universitätsklinik für Innere Medizin I
    Institut für Krebsforschung
    Borschkegasse 8a
    1090 Wien
    T: +43 (0)1 40160-57580
    thomas.bauer@meduniwien.ac.at