Abstract

BackgroundMelanoma is one of the most aggressive tumors with the remarkable characteristic of resistance to traditional chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Although targeted therapy and immunotherapy benefit advanced melanoma patient treatment, BRAFi (BRAF inhibitor) resistance and the lower response rates or severe side effects of immunotherapy have been observed, therefore, it is necessary to develop novel inhibitors for melanoma treatment.MethodsWe detected the cell proliferation of lj-1-59 in different melanoma cells by CCK 8 and colony formation assay. To further explore the mechanisms of lj-1-59 in melanoma, we performed RNA sequencing to discover the pathway of differential gene enrichment. Western blot and Q-RT-PCR were confirmed to study the function of lj-1-59 in melanoma.ResultsWe found that lj-1-59 inhibits melanoma cell proliferation in vitro and in vivo, induces cell cycle arrest at the G2/M phase and promotes apoptosis in melanoma cell lines. Furthermore, RNA-Seq was performed to study alterations in gene expression profiles after treatment with lj-1-59 in melanoma cells, revealing that this compound regulates various pathways, such as DNA replication, P53, apoptosis and the cell cycle. Additionally, we validated the effect of lj-1-59 on key gene expression alterations by Q-RT-PCR. Our findings showed that lj-1-59 significantly increases ROS (reactive oxygen species) products, leading to DNA toxicity in melanoma cell lines. Moreover, lj-1-59 increases ROS levels in BRAFi -resistant melanoma cells, leading to DNA damage, which caused G2/M phase arrest and apoptosis.ConclusionsTaken together, we found that lj-1-59 treatment inhibits melanoma cell growth by inducing apoptosis and DNA damage through increased ROS levels, suggesting that this compound is a potential therapeutic drug for melanoma treatment.

Highlights

  • Melanoma is one of the most aggressive tumors with the remarkable characteristic of resistance to traditional chemotherapy and radiotherapy

  • PLX4720 has been developed as a BRAFV600E inhibitor versus BRAF wildtype tumors in vivo based on a structural analog, which was approved for the treatment of advanced metastatic melanoma patients with BRAFV600E mutation expression [11]

  • A 22% response and 4.8-month median progressionfree survival were observed in patients with metastatic melanoma expressing BRAFV600E/K after trametinib therapy compared with chemotherapy [13]

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Summary

Introduction

Melanoma is one of the most aggressive tumors with the remarkable characteristic of resistance to traditional chemotherapy and radiotherapy. The BRAFV600E mutation acts as a pivotal oncogenic driver gene in melanoma, leading to the development of targeted BRAF kinase inhibitors. PLX4720 has been developed as a BRAFV600E inhibitor versus BRAF wildtype tumors in vivo based on a structural analog, which was approved for the treatment of advanced metastatic melanoma patients with BRAFV600E mutation expression [11]. MEK inhibitors, such as trametinib, have been approved for the treatment of advanced melanoma patients carrying the BRAF mutation [12]. A 22% response and 4.8-month median progressionfree survival were observed in patients with metastatic melanoma expressing BRAFV600E/K after trametinib therapy compared with chemotherapy [13]. BRAFi significantly benefits clinical responses and promotes advanced melanoma patient survival, drug resistance and relapse can develop over several months of treatment [14]

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