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A neural crest stem cell-like state drives nongenetic resistance to targeted therapy in melanoma

Authors :
Van Raemdonck N
Aljosja Rogiers
Diether Lambrechts
Toon Swings
Dennis Pedri
Mitchell P. Levesque
Helen Rizos
Thierry Voet
Oliver Bechter
Vanden Bempt I
Amanda W. Lund
Michael Dewaele
Florian Rambow
Joanna Pozniak
Francesca Maria Bosisio
Jean-Christophe Marine
Eleonora Leucci
Julia Femel
Jonas Demeulemeester
Vander Borght S
Panagiotis Karras
Greet Bervoets
Oskar Marín-Béjar
van den Oord Jj
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

SummaryThe ability to predict the future behaviour of an individual cancer is crucial for precision cancer medicine and, in particular, for the development of strategies that prevent acquisition of resistance to anti-cancer drugs. Therapy resistance, which often develops from a heterogeneous pool of drug-tolerant cells known as minimal residual disease (MRD), is thought to mainly occur through acquisition of genetic alterations. Increasing evidence, however, indicates that drug resistance might also be acquired though nongenetic mechanisms. A key emerging question is therefore whether specific molecular and/or cellular features of the MRD ecosystem determine which of these two distinct resistance trajectories will eventually prevail. We show herein that, in melanoma exposed to MAPK-therapeutics, the presence of a neural crest stem cell (NCSC) subpopulation in MRD concurred with the rapid development of resistance through nongenetic mechanisms. Emergence of this drug-tolerant population in MRD relies on a GDNF-dependent autocrine and paracrine signalling cascade, which activates the AKT survival pathway in a Focal-adhesion kinase-(FAK) dependent manner. Ablation of this subpopulation through inhibition of FAK/SRC-signalling delayed relapse in patient-derived tumour xenografts. Strikingly, all tumours that eventually escaped this treatment exhibited resistance-conferring genetic alterations and increased sensitivity to ERK-inhibition. These findings firmly establish that nongenetic reprogramming events contribute to therapy resistance in melanoma and identify a clinically-compatible approach that abrogates such a trajectory. Importantly, these data demonstrate that the cellular composition of MRD deterministically imposes distinct drug resistance evolutionary paths and highlight key principles that may permit more effective pre-emptive therapeutic interventions.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........b466c17d3ecfd67a3e047c9d14c3e305