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Harnessing the polyamine transport system to treat BRAF inhibitor-resistant melanoma

Authors :
Erin Fahey
Eric T. Alexander
Susan K. Gilmour
Otto Phanstiel
Julia Donnelly
Katelyn Wolfgang
Olivia El Naggar
Kelsey Mariner
Source :
Cancer Biol Ther
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Informa UK Limited, 2021.

Abstract

BRAF mutations are present in over half of all melanoma tumors. Although BRAF inhibitors significantly improve survival of patients with metastatic melanoma, recurrences occur within several months. We previously reported that BRAF mutant melanoma cells are more sensitive to a novel arylmethyl-polyamine (AP) compound that exploits their increased polyamine uptake compared to that of BRAF wildtype cells. Using an animal model of BRAF inhibitor-resistant melanoma, we show that co-treatment with the BRAF inhibitor, PLX4720, and AP significantly delays the recurrence of PLX4720-resistant melanoma tumors and decreases tumor-promoting macrophages. Development of BRAF inhibitor-resistance enriches for metastatic cancer stem cells (CSC) and increases tumor-promoting macrophages. In vitro studies demonstrated that CD304(+), CXCR4(+) spheroid cultures of BRAF mutant melanoma cells are resistant to PLX4720 but are more sensitive to AP compared to monolayer cultures of the same cells. AP significantly inhibited YUMM1.7 melanoma cell invasiveness across a Matrigel-coated filter using the CXCR4 ligand, SDF-1α, as the chemoattractant. AP also blocked the chemotactic effect of SDF-1α on CXCR4(+) macrophages and inhibited M2 polarization of macrophages. In melanoma-macrophage co-cultures, AP prevented the PLX4720-induced release of pro-tumorigenic growth factors, such as VEGF, from macrophages and prevented the macrophage rescue of BRAF mutant melanoma cells treated with PLX4720. Our study offers a novel therapy (AP) to treat chemo-resistant melanoma. AP is unique because it targets the polyamine transport system in BRAF inhibitor-resistant CSCs and also blocks CXCR4 signaling in invasive melanoma cells and pro-tumorigenic macrophages.

Details

ISSN :
15558576 and 15384047
Volume :
22
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer Biology & Therapy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5c89fe34d9d738739ec521874e00a5ad
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/15384047.2021.1883185