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Exploiting Drug Addiction Mechanisms to Select against MAPKi-Resistant Melanoma

Authors :
Sheri L. Holmen
Norman E. Sharpless
Aayoung Hong
Gatien Moriceau
Roger S. Lo
Robert Damoiseaux
Lu Sun
Shirley H. Lomeli
Marco Piva
Willy Hugo
Source :
Cancer discovery, vol 8, iss 1, Hong, A; Moriceau, G; Sun, L; Lomeli, S; Piva, M; Damoiseaux, R; et al.(2018). Exploiting Drug Addiction Mechanisms to Select against MAPKi-Resistant Melanoma. CANCER DISCOVERY, 8(1), 74-93. doi: 10.1158/2159-8290.CD-17-0682. UCLA: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/0rw3n8n2
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2018.

Abstract

Melanoma resistant to MAPK inhibitors (MAPKi) displays loss of fitness upon experimental MAPKi withdrawal and, clinically, may be resensitized to MAPKi therapy after a drug holiday. Here, we uncovered and therapeutically exploited the mechanisms of MAPKi addiction in MAPKi-resistant BRAFMUT or NRASMUT melanoma. MAPKi-addiction phenotypes evident upon drug withdrawal spanned transient cell-cycle slowdown to cell-death responses, the latter of which required a robust phosphorylated ERK (pERK) rebound. Generally, drug withdrawal–induced pERK rebound upregulated p38–FRA1–JUNB–CDKN1A and downregulated proliferation, but only a robust pERK rebound resulted in DNA damage and parthanatos-related cell death. Importantly, pharmacologically impairing DNA damage repair during MAPKi withdrawal augmented MAPKi addiction across the board by converting a cell-cycle deceleration to a caspase-dependent cell-death response or by furthering parthanatos-related cell death. Specifically in MEKi-resistant NRASMUT or atypical BRAFMUT melanoma, treatment with a type I RAF inhibitor intensified pERK rebound elicited by MEKi withdrawal, thereby promoting a cell death–predominant MAPKi-addiction phenotype. Thus, MAPKi discontinuation upon disease progression should be coupled with specific strategies that augment MAPKi addiction. Significance: Discontinuing targeted therapy may select against drug-resistant tumor clones, but drug-addiction mechanisms are ill-defined. Using melanoma resistant to but withdrawn from MAPKi, we defined a synthetic lethality between supraphysiologic levels of pERK and DNA damage. Actively promoting this synthetic lethality could rationalize sequential/rotational regimens that address evolving vulnerabilities. Cancer Discov; 8(1); 74–93. ©2017 AACR. See related commentary by Stern, p. 20. This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer discovery, vol 8, iss 1, Hong, A; Moriceau, G; Sun, L; Lomeli, S; Piva, M; Damoiseaux, R; et al.(2018). Exploiting Drug Addiction Mechanisms to Select against MAPKi-Resistant Melanoma. CANCER DISCOVERY, 8(1), 74-93. doi: 10.1158/2159-8290.CD-17-0682. UCLA: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/0rw3n8n2
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6e21f386ed608caf6edce7ee9da861bc