p53 Promotes Cytokine Expression in Melanoma to Regulate Drug Resistance and Migration

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Abstract

The transcription factor p53 is frequently lost during tumor development in solid tumors; however, most melanomas retain a wild type p53 protein. The presence of wild type p53 in melanoma has fueled speculation that p53 may play a neutral or pro-tumorigenic role in this disease. Here we show that p53 is functional in human melanoma cell lines, and that loss of p53 results in a general reduction in basal NF-kB regulated cytokine production. The reduced cytokine expression triggered by p53 loss is broad and includes key inflammatory chemokines, such as CXCL1, CXCL8, and the IL6 class cytokine LIF, resulting in a reduced ability to induce chemotactic-dependent migration of tumor cells and immune cells and increased sensitivity to BRAF inhibition. Taken together, this result indicates that wild type p53 regulates cytokine expression and induces cytokine-dependent phenotype on melanoma.

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Pandya, P., Kublo, L., & Stewart-Ornstein, J. (2022). p53 Promotes Cytokine Expression in Melanoma to Regulate Drug Resistance and Migration. Cells, 11(3). https://doi.org/10.3390/cells11030405

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