Abstract
BackgroundHistone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors are immunomodulatory, and demonstrate antitumor activity in various tumor models including malignant melanoma. ObjectiveThe present study examines the effectiveness of IL-2 and HDAC inhibitor MS-275-combination therapy in a murine melanoma model. MethodsB16F10 cells were implanted subcutaneously in C57BL/6 mice which were randomly divided into four groups and treated with either IL-2 by subcutaneous injection, MS-275 by oral gavage (5 days/week, daily for 2 weeks), or a combination of the two agents. ResultsMS-275 treatment showed a dose-dependent inhibitory effect on B16 cells in a colonogenic assay. Flow cytometry analysis indicated that MS-275 induced G1 arrest but not apoptosis in vitro, but IL-2 failed to inhibit cell proliferation. The combination of MS-275 and IL-2 had a statistically significant additive inhibitory effect on melanoma tumor weight and volume in vivo. Significantly higher survival was evident in the combination group compared with the control or single-agent groups. The combination therapy produced a greater ratio of CD8+ CD69+ T cells in lymph nodes than was seen in the MS-275-treatment and no-treatment groups among tumoriferous mice. Splenocytes from mice treated with MS-275 and the combination therapy demonstrated greater lysis of melanoma cells in vitro than splenocytes from mice treated with IL-2 or those without treatment. A significant antitumor effect from IL-2 and MS-275-combination therapy in vivo was seen in the increased number of activated CD8+ T cells. ConclusionsThese data provide a convincing rationale for considering the role of epigenetics in future treatments for malignant melanoma.
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