Abstract

BackgroundMalignant melanoma in dogs is considered to be largely resistant to conventional chemotherapy, although responses to carboplatin have been documented. Invasion and early metastasis are common features of certain melanoma subtypes that contribute to tumour progression despite aggressive local and systemic therapy. Upregulation of the PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway has been observed in canine malignant melanoma and may represent a potential target for therapy. Rapamycin (sirolimus) and everolimus are commercially available small molecule inhibitors that target mTOR and therefore may have anticancer activity in canine melanoma. It was hypothesized that there is synergism between rapamycin or everolimus and platinum chemotherapy, and that combination drug treatment would inhibit target/downstream proteins involved in cell viability/proliferation and increase cell death in canine melanoma cells. It was further hypothesized that rapamycin or everolimus would impact metabolism by reducing glycolysis in these cells. Four canine melanoma cell lines were treated in vitro with rapamycin and everolimus as sole treatment or combined with carboplatin. Cell viability, apoptosis, target modulation, and glycolytic metabolism were evaluated by crystal violet colourimetric assay, Annexin V/PI flow cytometry, western blotting, and Seahorse bioanalyzer, respectively.ResultsWhen combined with carboplatin chemotherapy, rapamycin or everolimus treatment was overall synergistic in reducing cell viability. Carboplatin-induced apoptosis was noted at 72 h after treatment compared to the vehicle control. Levels of phosphorylated mTOR were reduced by rapamycin and everolimus in all four cell lines, but activation of the downstream protein p70S6K was not consistently reduced by treatment in two of the cell lines. Both mTOR inhibitors decreased the extracellular acidification rate of canine melanoma cells, indicating reduced cancer cell glycolytic activity.ConclusionsInhibition of mTOR by rapalogs, such as rapamycin and everolimus combined with carboplatin chemotherapy may have activity in canine melanoma. Future mechanistic investigation is warranted, including in vivo assessment of this combination therapy.

Highlights

  • Malignant melanoma in dogs is considered to be largely resistant to conventional chemotherapy, responses to carboplatin have been documented

  • Rapamycin or everolimus single‐agent treatment The viability of each cell line was evaluated after singleagent treatment to guide the choice of drug doses to be utilized for subsequent combination experiments

  • The calculated IC50 of rapamycin ranged between 9.0 × ­103–1.0 × ­1013 nM and the IC50 of everolimus ranged between 7.2 × ­103–1.3 × ­104 nM

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Summary

Introduction

Malignant melanoma in dogs is considered to be largely resistant to conventional chemotherapy, responses to carboplatin have been documented. Invasion and early metastasis are common features of certain melanoma subtypes that contribute to tumour progression despite aggressive local and systemic therapy. Upregulation of the PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway has been observed in canine malignant melanoma and may represent a potential target for therapy. Rapamycin (sirolimus) and everolimus are commercially available small molecule inhibitors that target mTOR and may have anticancer activity in canine melanoma. It was hypothesized that there is synergism between rapamycin or everolimus and platinum chemotherapy, and that combination drug treatment would inhibit target/downstream proteins involved in cell viability/proliferation and increase cell death in canine melanoma cells. Four canine melanoma cell lines were treated in vitro with rapamycin and everolimus as sole treatment or combined with carboplatin. While the overall outcome is variable, most patients succumb to disease progression locally and/or distantly despite local and systemic treatment [2, 3, 5,6,7]

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