1. BRAF inhibition sensitizes melanoma cells to α-amanitin via decreased RNA polymerase II assembly.
- Author
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Frischknecht L, Britschgi C, Galliker P, Christinat Y, Vichalkovski A, Gstaiger M, Kovacs WJ, and Krek W
- Subjects
- Apoptosis drug effects, Cell Line, Tumor, Humans, Signal Transduction drug effects, Alpha-Amanitin pharmacology, Cell Death drug effects, Melanoma metabolism, Nucleic Acid Synthesis Inhibitors pharmacology, Proto-Oncogene Proteins B-raf antagonists & inhibitors, RNA Polymerase II metabolism
- Abstract
Despite the great success of small molecule inhibitors in the treatment of patients with BRAF
V600E mutated melanoma, the response to these drugs remains transient and patients eventually relapse within a few months, highlighting the need to develop novel combination therapies based on the understanding of the molecular changes induced by BRAFV600E inhibitors. The acute inhibition of oncogenic signaling can rewire entire cellular signaling pathways and thereby create novel cancer cell vulnerabilities. Here, we demonstrate that inhibition of BRAFV600E oncogenic signaling in melanoma cell lines leads to destabilization of the large subunit of RNA polymerase II POLR2A (polymerase RNA II DNA-directed polypeptide A), thereby preventing its binding to the unconventional prefoldin RPB5 interactor (URI1) chaperone complex and the successful assembly of RNA polymerase II holoenzymes. Furthermore, in melanoma cell lines treated with mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) inhibitors, α-amanitin, a specific and irreversible inhibitor of RNA polymerase II, induced massive apoptosis. Pre-treatment of melanoma cell lines with MAPK inhibitors significantly reduced IC50 values to α-amanitin, creating a state of collateral vulnerability similar to POLR2A hemizygous deletions. Thus, the development of melanoma specific α-amanitin antibody-drug conjugates could represent an interesting therapeutic approach for combination therapies with BRAFV600E inhibitors.- Published
- 2019
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