Abstract

Our research group demonstrated that riluzole, an inhibitor of glutamatergic signaling reduced melanoma cell proliferation in vitro and tumor progression in vivo. The underlying mechanisms of riluzole are largely unknown. Microarray analyses on two human melanoma cell lines revealed that riluzole stimulates expression of the cystine-glutamate amino acid antiporter, xCT (SLC7A11). Western immunoblot analysis from cultured human melanoma or normal melanocytic cells showed that xCT was significantly overexpressed in most melanomas, but not normal cells. Studies using human tumor biopsy samples demonstrated that overexpression of xCT was correlated with cancer stage and progression. To further investigate if xCT is involved in melanoma cell growth, we derived several stable clones through transfection of exogenous xCT to melanoma cells that originally showed very low expression of xCT. The elevated xCT expression promoted cell proliferation in vitro and inversely, these melanoma clones showed a dose-dependent decrease in cell proliferation in response to riluzole treatment. Xenograft studies showed that these clones formed very aggressive tumors at a higher rate compared to vector controls. Conversely, treatment of xenograft-bearing animals with riluzole down-regulated xCT expression suggesting that xCT is a molecular target of riluzole. Furthermore, protein lysates from tumor biopsies of patients that participated in a riluzole monotherapy phase II clinical trial showed a reduction in xCT levels in post-treatment specimens from patients with stable disease. Taken together, our results show that xCT may be utilized as a marker to monitor patients undergoing riluzole-based chemotherapies.

Highlights

  • Melanoma is the deadliest form of skin cancer that is derived from the uncontrolled growth of melanocytes derived from neural crest cells

  • Human melanoma cells and biopsies over-express xCT Microarray analysis was performed for two different human melanoma cell lines (UACC903 and C8161)

  • Western immunoblots confirmed that xCT is highly expressed in most human melanoma cell lines compared to human primary melanocytes (Fig. 1a)

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Summary

Introduction

Melanoma is the deadliest form of skin cancer that is derived from the uncontrolled growth of melanocytes derived from neural crest cells. We demonstrated that aberrant expression of metabotropic glutamate receptor 1 (GRM1) in melanocytes was sufficient to induce cell transformation and metastatic tumor formation in vitro and in vivo[5,6,7,8]. GRM1-conditional transgenic mice and transgenic mice with enhanced GRM5 expression displayed a similar metastatic melanoma phenotype[1,2]. Whole-exome sequencing revealed that an ionotropic glutamate receptor, GRIN2A is mutated in 33% (n = 52) of melanoma biopsies and cell lines tested[4]. GRM3 was revealed to be mutated in 16.3% (13 of 80 tumors) of melanomas[3]

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