| Literature DB >> 30709805 |
Ophélia Maertens1,2,3, Ryan Kuzmickas1,2, Haley E Manchester1,2, Chloe E Emerson1,2, Alessandra G Gavin1,2, Caroline J Guild1,2, Terence C Wong4,5, Thomas De Raedt1,2, Christian Bowman-Colin2,6, Elodie Hatchi2,6, Levi A Garraway2,3,4,5, Keith T Flaherty2,7, Shailja Pathania8, Stephen J Elledge1,2,3,9, Karen Cichowski10,2,3.
Abstract
Although the majority of BRAF-mutant melanomas respond to BRAF/MEK inhibitors, these agents are not typically curative. Moreover, they are largely ineffective in NRAS- and NF1-mutant tumors. Here we report that genetic and chemical suppression of HDAC3 potently cooperates with MAPK pathway inhibitors in all three RAS pathway-driven tumors. Specifically, we show that entinostat dramatically enhances tumor regression when combined with BRAF/MEK inhibitors, in both models that are sensitive or relatively resistant to these agents. Interestingly, MGMT expression predicts responsiveness and marks tumors with latent defects in DNA repair. BRAF/MEK inhibitors enhance these defects by suppressing homologous recombination genes, inducing a BRCA-like state; however, addition of entinostat triggers the concomitant suppression of nonhomologous end-joining genes, resulting in a chemical synthetic lethality caused by excessive DNA damage. Together, these studies identify melanomas with latent DNA repair defects, describe a promising drug combination that capitalizes on these defects, and reveal a tractable therapeutic biomarker. SIGNIFICANCE: BRAF/MEK inhibitors are not typically curative in BRAF-mutant melanomas and are ineffective in NRAS- and NF1-mutant tumors. We show that HDAC inhibitors dramatically enhance the efficacy of BRAF/MEK inhibitors in sensitive and insensitive RAS pathway-driven melanomas by coordinately suppressing two DNA repair pathways, and identify a clinical biomarker that predicts responsiveness.See related commentary by Lombard et al., p. 469.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 453. ©2019 American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30709805 DOI: 10.1158/2159-8290.CD-18-0879
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Discov ISSN: 2159-8274 Impact factor: 39.397