Abstract

<div>Abstract<p>1α,25-Dihydroxyvitamin D3 signals via the vitamin D receptor (VDR). Higher serum vitamin D is associated with thinner primary melanoma and better outcome, although a causal mechanism has not been established. As patients with melanoma commonly avoid sun exposure, and consequent vitamin D deficiency might worsen outcomes, we interrogated 703 primary melanoma transcriptomes to understand the role of vitamin D–VDR signaling and replicated the findings in The Cancer Genome Atlas metastases. <i>VDR</i> expression was independently protective for melanoma-related death in both primary and metastatic disease. High tumor <i>VDR</i> expression was associated with upregulation of pathways mediating antitumor immunity and corresponding with higher imputed immune cell scores and histologically detected tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes. High <i>VDR</i>–expressing tumors had downregulation of proliferative pathways, notably Wnt/β-catenin signaling. Deleterious low <i>VDR</i> levels resulted from promoter methylation and gene deletion in metastases. Vitamin D deficiency (<25 nmol/L ∼ 10 ng/mL) shortened survival in primary melanoma in a <i>VDR</i>-dependent manner. <i>In vitro</i> functional validation studies showed that elevated vitamin D–VDR signaling inhibited Wnt/β-catenin signaling genes. Murine melanoma cells overexpressing <i>VDR</i> produced fewer pulmonary metastases than controls in tail-vein metastasis assays. In summary, vitamin D–VDR signaling contributes to controlling pro-proliferative/immunosuppressive Wnt/β-catenin signaling in melanoma and this is associated with less metastatic disease and stronger host immune responses. This is evidence of a causal relationship between vitamin D–VDR signaling and melanoma survival, which should be explored as a therapeutic target in primary resistance to checkpoint blockade.</p>Significance:<p>VDR expression could potentially be used as a biomarker to stratify patients with melanoma that may respond better to immunotherapy.</p></div>

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