4.6 Article

Seriniquinones as Therapeutic Leads for Treatment of BRAF and NRAS Mutant Melanomas

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 26, Issue 23, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules26237362

Keywords

natural products; drug discovery; marine pharmacology; antitumor agent; dermcidin; autophagy; apoptosis

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Isolated from marine bacteria Serinicoccus sp., seriniquinone (SQ1) has selective activity in melanoma cell lines by modulating human dermcidin, inducing autophagy and apoptosis. The analogue SQ2 shows improved solubility and higher selectivity for melanoma cells. BRAF and NRAS mutations exhibit different sensitivities to autophagy inhibition when exposed to SQ1 and SQ2, suggesting potential treatment strategies for BRAF-mutated tumors.
Isolated from the marine bacteria Serinicoccus sp., seriniquinone (SQ1) has been characterized by its selective activity in melanoma cell lines marked by its modulation of human dermcidin and induction of autophagy and apoptosis. While an active lead, the lack of solubility of SQ1 in both organic and aqueous media has complicated its preclinical evaluation. In response, our team turned its effort to explore analogues with the goal of returning synthetically accessible materials with comparable selectivity and activity. The analogue SQ2 showed improved solubility and reached a 30-40-fold greater selectivity for melanoma cells. Here, we report a detailed comparison of the activity of SQ1 and SQ2 in SK-MEL-28 and SK-MEL-147 cell lines, carrying the top melanoma-associated mutations, BRAF(V600E) and NRAS(Q61R), respectively. These studies provide a definitive report on the activity, viability, clonogenicity, dermcidin expression, autophagy, and apoptosis induction following exposure to SQ1 or SQ2. Overall, these studies showed that SQ1 and SQ2 demonstrated comparable activity and modulation of dermcidin expression. These studies are further supported through the evaluation of a panel of basal expression of key-genes related to autophagy and apoptosis, providing further insight into the role of these mutations. To explore this rather as a survival or death mechanism, autophagy inhibition sensibilized BRAF mutants to SQ1 and SQ2, whereas the opposite happened to NRAS mutants. These data suggest that the seriniquinones remain active, independently of the melanoma mutation, and suggest the future combination of their application with inhibitors of autophagy to treat BRAF-mutated tumors.

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