Induction of telomere dysfunction prolongs disease control of therapy-resistant melanoma

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Abstract

Purpose: Telomerase promoter mutations are highly prevalent in human tumors including melanoma. A subset of patients with metastatic melanoma often fail multiple therapies, and there is an unmet and urgent need to prolong disease control for those patients. Experimental Design: Numerous preclinical therapy-resistant models of human and mouse melanoma were used to test the efficacy of a telomerase-directed nucleoside, 6-thio-2'-deoxyguanosine (6-thio-dG). Integrated transcrip-tomics and proteomics approaches were used to identify genes and proteins that were significantly downregulated by 6-thio-dG. Results: We demonstrated the superior efficacy of 6-thio-dG both in vitro and in vivo that results in telomere dysfunction, leading to apoptosis and cell death in various preclinical models of therapy-resistant melanoma cells. 6-thio-dG concomitantly induces telomere dysfunction and inhibits the expression level of AXL. Conclusions: In summary, this study shows that indirectly targeting aberrant telomerase in melanoma cells with 6-thio-dG is a viable therapeutic approach in prolonging disease control and overcoming therapy resistance.

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Zhang, G., Wu, L. W., Mender, I., Barzily-Rokni, M., Hammond, M. R., Ope, O., … Shay, J. W. (2018). Induction of telomere dysfunction prolongs disease control of therapy-resistant melanoma. Clinical Cancer Research, 24(19), 4771–4784. https://doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-17-2773

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