| Literature DB >> 28526299 |
Matias A Bustos1, Shigeshi Ono1, Diego M Marzese1, Takashi Oyama1, Yuuki Iida1, Garrett Cheung1, Nellie Nelson2, Sandy C Hsu3, Qiang Yu4, Dave S B Hoon5.
Abstract
The CDK4/6 pathway is frequently dysregulated in cutaneous melanoma. Recently, CDK4/6 inhibitors have shown promising clinical activity against several cancer types, including melanoma. Here, we show that microRNA-200a decreases CDK6 expression and thus reduces the response of CDK4/6 inhibitor in highly proliferative metastatic melanoma. Down-regulation of microRNA-200a expression in melanoma cells is associated with disease progression and a higher number of lymph node metastases. Furthermore, microRNA-200a expression is epigenetically modulated by both DNA methylation at the promoter region and chromatin accessibility of an upstream genomic region with enhancer activity. Mechanistically, overexpression of miR-200a in metastatic melanoma cells induces cell cycle arrest by targeting CDK6 and decreases the levels of phosphorylated-Rb1 and E2F-downstream targets, diminishing cell proliferation; these effects are recovered by CDK6 overexpression. Conversely, low microRNA-200a expression in metastatic melanoma cells results in higher levels of CDK6 and a more significant response to CDK4/6 inhibitors. We propose that microRNA-200a functions as a "cell cycle brake" that is lost during melanoma progression to metastasis and provides the ability to identify melanomas that are highly proliferative and more prompted to respond to CDK4/6 inhibitors.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28526299 DOI: 10.1016/j.jid.2017.03.039
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Invest Dermatol ISSN: 0022-202X Impact factor: 8.551