Abstract

Over 60% of human melanoma tumors bear a mutation in the BRAF gene. The most frequent mutation is a substitution at codon 600 (V600E), leading to a constitutively active BRAF and overactivation of the MAPK pathway. Patients harboring mutated BRAF respond to kinase inhibitors such as vemurafenib. However, these responses are transient, and relapses are frequent. Melanoma cells are efficiently lysed by activated natural killer (NK) cells. Melanoma cells express several stress-induced ligands that are recognized by activating NK-cell receptors. We have investigated the effect of vemurafenib on the immunogenicity of seven BRAF-mutated melanoma cells to NK cells and on their growth and sensitivity to NK-cell-mediated lysis. We showed that vemurafenib treatment modulated expression of ligands for two activating NK receptors, increasing expression of B7-H6, a ligand for NKp30, and decreasing expression of MICA and ULBP2, ligands for NKG2D. Vemurafenib also increased expression of HLA class I and HLA-E molecules, likely leading to higher engagement of inhibitory receptors (KIRs and NKG2A, respectively), and decreased lysis of vemurafenib-treated melanoma cell lines by cytokine-activated NK cells. Finally, we showed that whereas batimastat (a broad-spectrum matrix metalloprotease inhibitor) increased cell surface ULBP2 by reducing its shedding, vemurafenib lowered soluble ULBP2, indicating that BRAF signal inhibition diminished expression of both cell-surface and soluble forms of NKG2D ligands. Vemurafenib, inhibiting BRAF signaling, shifted the balance of activatory and inhibitory NK ligands on melanoma cells and displayed immunoregulatory effects on NK-cell functional activities. Cancer Immunol Res; 5(7); 582-93. ©2017 AACR.

Highlights

  • Metastatic melanoma is an aggressive type of skin cancer with a high metastatic potential

  • ULBP2, confirming that ULBP2 expression could be regulated by matrix metalloproteases (MMP) in melanoma cell lines (Fig. 6B). These results indicate that vemurafenib did not alter membrane expression of NKG2D ligands (NKG2D-L) through increased shedding

  • We focused on the effect of vemurafenib on the immunogenicity to natural killer (NK) cells of melanoma cell lines with different BRAF mutational statuses

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Summary

Introduction

Metastatic melanoma is an aggressive type of skin cancer with a high metastatic potential. For more than 20 years, the two therapies approved by the FDA were high-dose IL2 and dacarbazine (DTIC), each associated with response rates of only 10% to 20%, low percentages of complete responses, and no improved overall survival. A search for mutations in components of the MAPK pathway in various common cancers revealed that 60% of. Note: Supplementary data for this article are available at Cancer Immunology Research Online (http://cancerimmunolres.aacrjournals.org/).

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