IBYME   02675
INSTITUTO DE BIOLOGIA Y MEDICINA EXPERIMENTAL
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Mutational activation of BRAF confers sensitivity to transforming growth factor beta inhibitors in human cancer cells.
Autor/es:
LINDSAY C. SPENDER, G. JOHN FERGUSON, SIJIA LIU, CHAO CUI, MARIA ROMINA GIROTTI *, GARY SIBBETT, TOM HAMILTON, PAUL LORIGAN, NORMAN E. SHARPLESS, MICHAEL WELLER, MARGARET FRAME, PETER TEN DIJKE, RICHARD MARAIS AND GARETH J INMAN
Revista:
ONCOTARGET
Editorial:
Impact Journals, LLC
Referencias:
Año: 2016
Resumen:
Recent data implicate elevated transforming growth factor-β (TGFβ) signalling in BRAF inhibitor drug-resistance mechanisms, but the potential for targeting TGFβ signalling in cases of advanced melanoma has not been investigated. We show that mutant BRAFV600E confers an intrinsic dependence on TGFβ/TGFβ receptor 1 (TGFBR1) signalling for clonogenicity of murine melanocytes. Pharmacological inhibition of the TGFBR1 blocked the clonogenicity of human mutant BRAF melanoma cells through SMAD4-independent inhibition of mitosis, and also inhibited metastasis in xenografted zebrafish. When investigating the therapeutic potential of combining inhibitors of mutant BRAF and TGFBR1, we noted that unexpectedly, low-dose PLX-4720 (a vemurafenib analogue) promoted proliferation of drug-naïve melanoma cells. Pharmacological or pharmacogenetic inhibition of TGFBR1 blocked growth promotion and phosphorylation of SRC, which is frequently associated with vemurafenib-resistance mechanisms. Importantly, vemurafenib-resistant patient derived cells retained sensitivity to TGFBR1 inhibition, suggesting that TGFBR1 could be targeted therapeutically to combat the development of vemurafenib drug-resistance.