Activation of the Integrated Stress Response in drug-tolerant melanoma cells confers vulnerability to mitoribosome-targeting antibiotics

Autor: Roberto Vendramin, Panagiotis Karras, Angelina Konnova, Sara Adnane, Lara Rizzotto, Vasiliki Katopodi, Sonia Cinque, Francesca Maria Bosisio, Zorica Knezevic, Eleonora Leucci, Jean-Christophe Marine, Oliver Bechter, Ewout Demesmaeker
Rok vydání: 2020
Předmět:
Popis: SummaryTherapy resistance remains a major clinical challenge for the management of metastatic melanoma. Here we show that activation of the Integrated Stress Response (ISR), which we show is common in drug-tolerant and resistant melanoma, promotes selective synthesis of mitochondrial proteins in the cytosol. Since mitochondrial translation adapts to the influx of nuclear-encoded mitochondrial proteins, ISR activation indirectly enhances mitochondrial translation and makes these cells highly vulnerable to mitochondrial translation inhibitors. Treatment of melanoma with mitoribosome-targeting antibiotics, induces proteotoxic stress and significantly compromises the growth of NRAS-mutant and immunotherapy-resistant skin melanoma as well as uveal melanoma. Additionally, a triple BRAFi/MEKi/Tigecycline combination reduces intratumour heterogeneity by abrogating emergence of dedifferentiated drug-tolerant cells, and delayed or even prevented the development of resistance in BRAFV600E PDX models. Consistently, a melanoma patient exposed to Doxycycline, a mitoribosome-targeting antibiotic commonly used to treat infections, experienced a complete and long-lasting response of a treatment-resistant lesion.SignificanceOur study indicates that the repurposing of mitoribosome-targeting antibiotics offers a rational salvage strategy for targeted therapy in BRAF-mutant melanoma, and a therapeutic option to target NRAS-driven and immunotherapy-resistant cutaneous melanoma and uveal melanomas.
Databáze: OpenAIRE