Induction of resistance to BRAF inhibitor is associated with the inability of Spry2 to inhibit BRAF-V600E activity in BRAF mutant cells

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Title
Induction of resistance to BRAF inhibitor is associated with the inability of Spry2 to inhibit BRAF-V600E activity in BRAF mutant cells
Author(s)
Jun Ho Ahn; B I Han; M Lee
Bibliographic Citation
Biomolecules & Therapeutics, vol. 23, no. 4, pp. 320-326
Publication Year
2015
Abstract
The clinical benefits of oncogenic BRAF inhibitor therapies are limited by the emergence of drug resistance. In this study, we investigated the role of a negative regulator of the MAPK pathway, Spry2, in acquired resistance using BRAF inhibitor-resistant derivatives of the BRAF-V600E melanoma (A375P/Mdr). Real-time RT-PCR analysis indicated that the expression of Spry2 was higher in A375P cells harboring the BRAF V600E mutation compared with wild-type BRAF-bearing cells (SK-MEL-2) that are resistant to BRAF inhibitors. This result suggests the ability of BRAF V600E to evade feedback suppression in cell lines with BRAF V600E mutations despite high Spry2 expression. Most interestingly, Spry2 exhibited strongly reduced expression in A375P/Mdr cells with acquired resistance to BRAF inhibitors. Furthermore, the overexpression of Spry2 partially restored sensitivity to the BRAF inhibitor PLX4720 in two BRAF inhibitor-resistant cells, indicating a positive role for Spry2 in the growth inhibition induced by BRAF inhibitors. On the other hand, long-term treatment with PLX4720 induced pERK reactivation following BRAF inhibition in A375P cells, indicating that negative feedback including Spry2 may be bypassed in BRAF mutant melanoma cells. In addition, the siRNA-mediated knockdown of Raf-1 attenuated the rebound activation of ERK stimulated by PLX4720 in A375P cells, strongly suggesting the positive role of Raf-1 kinase in ERK activation in response to BRAF inhibition. Taken together, these data suggest that RAF signaling may be released from negative feedback inhibition through interacting with Spry2, leading to ERK rebound and, consequently, the induction of acquired resistance to BRAF inhibitors.
Keyword
BRAF inhibitorSpry2Negative feedbackMelanomaAcquired resistance
ISSN
1976-9148
Publisher
Korea Soc-Assoc-Inst
Full Text Link
http://dx.doi.org/10.4062/biomolther.2015.007
Type
Article
Appears in Collections:
1. Journal Articles > Journal Articles
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