4.7 Article

MITF Modulates Therapeutic Resistance through EGFR Signaling

Journal

JOURNAL OF INVESTIGATIVE DERMATOLOGY
Volume 135, Issue 7, Pages 1863-1872

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1038/jid.2015.105

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [K24 CA149202, P01CA163222, 5T32CA071345, 5T32AR007098]
  2. American Skin Association
  3. Swedish Cancer Society
  4. Swedish Research Council
  5. Berta Kamprad Foundation
  6. Gunnar Nilsson Cancer Foundation
  7. Gustav Vth Jubilee Foundation

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Response to targeted therapies varies significantly despite shared oncogenic mutations. Nowhere is this more apparent than in BRAF (V600E)-mutated melanomas where initial drug response can be striking and yet relapse is commonplace. Resistance to BRAF inhibitors have been attributed to the activation of various receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs), although the underlying mechanisms have been largely uncharacterized. Here, we found that EGFR-induced vemurafenib resistance is ligand dependent. We employed whole-genome expression analysis and discovered that vemurafenib resistance correlated with the loss of microphthalmia-associated transcription factor (MITF), along with its melanocyte lineage program, and with the activation of EGFR signaling. An inverse relationship between MITF, vemurafenib resistance, and EGFR was then observed in patient samples of recurrent melanoma and was conserved across melanoma cell lines and patients' tumor specimens. Functional studies revealed that MITF depletion activated EGFR signaling and consequently recapitulated the resistance phenotype. In contrast, forced expression of MITF in melanoma and colon cancer cells inhibited EGFR and conferred sensitivity to BRAF/MEK inhibitors. These findings indicate that an autocrine drug resistance loop is suppressed by melanocyte lineage signal(s), such as MITF. This resistance loop modulates drug response and could explain the unique sensitivity of melanomas to BRAF inhibition.

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