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Abrogation of Therapeutic Escape Pathways in BRAF Mutant Melanoma

$213,706P50FY2016CANIH

H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Ctr & Res Inst, Tampa FL

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Abstract

Our long-term goal is to develop therapeutic strategies that improve the survival of patients with disseminated melanoma by potentiating new and existing targeted therapies. Despite the impressive responses achieved in BRAF mutant melanoma patients treated with BRAF inhibitors, resistance inevitably occurs. A number of potential resistance mechanisms have been described, the majority of which bypass mutant BRAF through the reactivation of MAPK and PISK/AKT signaling. Although current clinical strategies are focused upon the use of BRAF inhibitors in conjunction with MEK or PISK inhibitors, the development of multiple, subtle signaling alterations at many nodes within the melanoma signaling network is likely to result in eventual resistance even to these combinations. Conceptually, we believe that the adaptive signals that mediate resistance in the majority of cases are both tumor-intrinsic, resulting from the rewiring of the melanoma signal transduction network, as well as host-derived, mediated by altered growth factor secretion and extracellular matrix from stromal fibroblasts. Our working hypothesis is that long-term abrogation of resistance will only be achieved if BF^F can be targeted in addition to multiple receptor tyrosine kinase (RTKs) and cell/matrix adhesion signals. Our preliminary studies suggest that most if not all of the signaling proteins implicated thus far in the escape from BRAF inhibitor therapy are clients of heat shock protein (HSP)-90, and we showed that inhibition of HSP90 was effective at preventing and overcoming resistance both in vitro and in vivo. In this proposal, we will use innovative phosphoproteomic- and chemical proteomic-based systems biology approaches to define the HSP clientome that drives intrinsic and acquired resistance of melanomas to MAPK pathway inhibition (BRAF, MEK and BRAF+MEK). We will further investigate the role of fibroblast-derived signals in remodeling the HSP-clientome of melanoma cells and will determine how this allows the tumor to escape MAPK inhibitor-mediated apoptosis. Pre- and post-treatment biopsies from melanoma patients receiving a BRAF and HSP90 inhibitor combination (vemurafenib+XL888) will be analyzed to look for patterns of HSP client protein degradation associated with long-term therapeutic response. Together, these studies are expected to give a systems level view of how melanoma cells resist MAPK pathway inhibition and will provide new paradigms to overcome drug resistance in melanoma.

View original record on NIH RePORTER →