Literature DB >> 23302800

Modelling vemurafenib resistance in melanoma reveals a strategy to forestall drug resistance.

Meghna Das Thakur1, Fernando Salangsang, Allison S Landman, William R Sellers, Nancy K Pryer, Mitchell P Levesque, Reinhard Dummer, Martin McMahon, Darrin D Stuart.   

Abstract

Mutational activation of BRAF is the most prevalent genetic alteration in human melanoma, with ≥50% of tumours expressing the BRAF(V600E) oncoprotein. Moreover, the marked tumour regression and improved survival of late-stage BRAF-mutated melanoma patients in response to treatment with vemurafenib demonstrates the essential role of oncogenic BRAF in melanoma maintenance. However, as most patients relapse with lethal drug-resistant disease, understanding and preventing mechanism(s) of resistance is critical to providing improved therapy. Here we investigate the cause and consequences of vemurafenib resistance using two independently derived primary human melanoma xenograft models in which drug resistance is selected by continuous vemurafenib administration. In one of these models, resistant tumours show continued dependency on BRAF(V600E)→MEKERK signalling owing to elevated BRAF(V600E) expression. Most importantly, we demonstrate that vemurafenib-resistant melanomas become drug dependent for their continued proliferation, such that cessation of drug administration leads to regression of established drug-resistant tumours. We further demonstrate that a discontinuous dosing strategy, which exploits the fitness disadvantage displayed by drug-resistant cells in the absence of the drug, forestalls the onset of lethal drug-resistant disease. These data highlight the concept that drug-resistant cells may also display drug dependency, such that altered dosing may prevent the emergence of lethal drug resistance. Such observations may contribute to sustaining the durability of the vemurafenib response with the ultimate goal of curative therapy for the subset of melanoma patients with BRAF mutations.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23302800      PMCID: PMC3930354          DOI: 10.1038/nature11814

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  22 in total

1.  Coexpression of NRASQ61R and BRAFV600E in human melanoma cells activates senescence and increases susceptibility to cell-mediated cytotoxicity.

Authors:  Carlotta Petti; Alessandra Molla; Claudia Vegetti; Soldano Ferrone; Andrea Anichini; Marialuisa Sensi
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2006-07-01       Impact factor: 12.701

2.  Raf-induced proliferation or cell cycle arrest is determined by the level of Raf activity with arrest mediated by p21Cip1.

Authors:  D Woods; D Parry; H Cherwinski; E Bosch; E Lees; M McMahon
Journal:  Mol Cell Biol       Date:  1997-09       Impact factor: 4.272

3.  Oncogenic BRAF is required for tumor growth and maintenance in melanoma models.

Authors:  Klaus P Hoeflich; Daniel C Gray; Michael T Eby; Janet Y Tien; Leo Wong; Janeko Bower; Alvin Gogineni; Jiping Zha; Mary J Cole; Howard M Stern; Lesley J Murray; David P Davis; Somasekar Seshagiri
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2006-01-15       Impact factor: 12.701

Review 4.  How to make a melanoma: what do we know of the primary clonal events?

Authors:  Dorothy C Bennett
Journal:  Pigment Cell Melanoma Res       Date:  2008-02       Impact factor: 4.693

5.  Suppression of BRAF(V599E) in human melanoma abrogates transformation.

Authors:  Sunil R Hingorani; Michael A Jacobetz; Gavin P Robertson; Meenhard Herlyn; David A Tuveson
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2003-09-01       Impact factor: 12.701

Review 6.  Specificity of receptor tyrosine kinase signaling: transient versus sustained extracellular signal-regulated kinase activation.

Authors:  C J Marshall
Journal:  Cell       Date:  1995-01-27       Impact factor: 41.582

7.  Senescence of human fibroblasts induced by oncogenic Raf.

Authors:  J Zhu; D Woods; M McMahon; J M Bishop
Journal:  Genes Dev       Date:  1998-10-01       Impact factor: 11.361

Review 8.  The MAPK pathway in melanoma.

Authors:  Leslie A Fecher; Ravi K Amaravadi; Keith T Flaherty
Journal:  Curr Opin Oncol       Date:  2008-03       Impact factor: 3.645

9.  Mutations of the BRAF gene in human cancer.

Authors:  Helen Davies; Graham R Bignell; Charles Cox; Philip Stephens; Sarah Edkins; Sheila Clegg; Jon Teague; Hayley Woffendin; Mathew J Garnett; William Bottomley; Neil Davis; Ed Dicks; Rebecca Ewing; Yvonne Floyd; Kristian Gray; Sarah Hall; Rachel Hawes; Jaime Hughes; Vivian Kosmidou; Andrew Menzies; Catherine Mould; Adrian Parker; Claire Stevens; Stephen Watt; Steven Hooper; Rebecca Wilson; Hiran Jayatilake; Barry A Gusterson; Colin Cooper; Janet Shipley; Darren Hargrave; Katherine Pritchard-Jones; Norman Maitland; Georgia Chenevix-Trench; Gregory J Riggins; Darell D Bigner; Giuseppe Palmieri; Antonio Cossu; Adrienne Flanagan; Andrew Nicholson; Judy W C Ho; Suet Y Leung; Siu T Yuen; Barbara L Weber; Hilliard F Seigler; Timothy L Darrow; Hugh Paterson; Richard Marais; Christopher J Marshall; Richard Wooster; Michael R Stratton; P Andrew Futreal
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2002-06-09       Impact factor: 49.962

10.  Clinical efficacy of a RAF inhibitor needs broad target blockade in BRAF-mutant melanoma.

Authors:  Gideon Bollag; Peter Hirth; James Tsai; Jiazhong Zhang; Prabha N Ibrahim; Hanna Cho; Wayne Spevak; Chao Zhang; Ying Zhang; Gaston Habets; Elizabeth A Burton; Bernice Wong; Garson Tsang; Brian L West; Ben Powell; Rafe Shellooe; Adhirai Marimuthu; Hoa Nguyen; Kam Y J Zhang; Dean R Artis; Joseph Schlessinger; Fei Su; Brian Higgins; Raman Iyer; Kurt D'Andrea; Astrid Koehler; Michael Stumm; Paul S Lin; Richard J Lee; Joseph Grippo; Igor Puzanov; Kevin B Kim; Antoni Ribas; Grant A McArthur; Jeffrey A Sosman; Paul B Chapman; Keith T Flaherty; Xiaowei Xu; Katherine L Nathanson; Keith Nolop
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2010-09-30       Impact factor: 49.962

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  326 in total

Review 1.  Intermittent dosing with vemurafenib in BRAF V600E-mutant melanoma: review of a case series.

Authors:  Andrew J Dooley; Avinash Gupta; Madhumita Bhattacharyya; Mark R Middleton
Journal:  Ther Adv Med Oncol       Date:  2014-11       Impact factor: 8.168

Review 2.  Universes collide: combining immunotherapy with targeted therapy for cancer.

Authors:  Jennifer A Wargo; Zachary A Cooper; Keith T Flaherty
Journal:  Cancer Discov       Date:  2014-11-13       Impact factor: 39.397

Review 3.  The influence of subclonal resistance mutations on targeted cancer therapy.

Authors:  Michael W Schmitt; Lawrence A Loeb; Jesse J Salk
Journal:  Nat Rev Clin Oncol       Date:  2015-10-20       Impact factor: 66.675

Review 4.  Cell-state dynamics and therapeutic resistance in melanoma from the perspective of MITF and IFNγ pathways.

Authors:  Xue Bai; David E Fisher; Keith T Flaherty
Journal:  Nat Rev Clin Oncol       Date:  2019-09       Impact factor: 66.675

5.  Modeling Genomic Instability and Selection Pressure in a Mouse Model of Melanoma.

Authors:  Lawrence N Kwong; Lihua Zou; Sharmeen Chagani; Chandra Sekhar Pedamallu; Mingguang Liu; Shan Jiang; Alexei Protopopov; Jianhua Zhang; Gad Getz; Lynda Chin
Journal:  Cell Rep       Date:  2017-05-16       Impact factor: 9.423

6.  Efficacy of intermittent combined RAF and MEK inhibition in a patient with concurrent BRAF- and NRAS-mutant malignancies.

Authors:  Omar Abdel-Wahab; Virginia M Klimek; Alisa A Gaskell; Agnes Viale; Donavan Cheng; Eunhee Kim; Raajit Rampal; Mark Bluth; James J Harding; Margaret K Callahan; Taha Merghoub; Michael F Berger; David B Solit; Neal Rosen; Ross L Levine; Paul B Chapman
Journal:  Cancer Discov       Date:  2014-03-03       Impact factor: 39.397

7.  Real-time, aptamer-based tracking of circulating therapeutic agents in living animals.

Authors:  Brian Scott Ferguson; David A Hoggarth; Dan Maliniak; Kyle Ploense; Ryan J White; Nick Woodward; Kuangwen Hsieh; Andrew J Bonham; Michael Eisenstein; Tod E Kippin; Kevin W Plaxco; Hyongsok Tom Soh
Journal:  Sci Transl Med       Date:  2013-11-27       Impact factor: 17.956

8.  Tumor-initiating CD49f cells are a hallmark of chemoresistant triple negative breast cancer.

Authors:  Jorge Gomez-Miragaya; Eva González-Suárez
Journal:  Mol Cell Oncol       Date:  2017-06-28

9.  Beneficial effects of RAF inhibitor in mutant BRAF splice variant-expressing melanoma.

Authors:  Edward J Hartsough; Kevin J Basile; Andrew E Aplin
Journal:  Mol Cancer Res       Date:  2014-02-11       Impact factor: 5.852

Review 10.  Modeling Tumor Clonal Evolution for Drug Combinations Design.

Authors:  Boyang Zhao; Michael T Hemann; Douglas A Lauffenburger
Journal:  Trends Cancer       Date:  2016-03
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