Broad-spectrum therapeutic suppression of metastatic melanoma through nuclear hormone receptor activation. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Melanoma metastasis is a devastating outcome lacking an effective preventative therapeutic. We provide pharmacologic, molecular, and genetic evidence establishing the liver-X nuclear hormone receptor (LXR) as a therapeutic target in melanoma. Oral administration of multiple LXR agonists suppressed melanoma invasion, angiogenesis, tumor progression, and metastasis. Molecular and genetic experiments revealed these effects to be mediated by LXRβ, which elicits these outcomes through transcriptional induction of tumoral and stromal apolipoprotein-E (ApoE). LXRβ agonism robustly suppressed tumor growth and metastasis across a diverse mutational spectrum of melanoma lines. LXRβ targeting significantly prolonged animal survival, suppressed the progression of established metastases, and inhibited brain metastatic colonization. Importantly, LXRβ activation displayed melanoma-suppressive cooperativity with the frontline regimens dacarbazine, B-Raf inhibition, and the anti-CTLA-4 antibody and robustly inhibited melanomas that had acquired resistance to B-Raf inhibition or dacarbazine. We present a promising therapeutic approach that uniquely acts by transcriptionally activating a metastasis suppressor gene.

publication date

  • February 27, 2014

Research

keywords

  • Melanoma
  • Neoplasm Metastasis
  • Orphan Nuclear Receptors
  • Skin Neoplasms

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 84896877541

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1016/j.cell.2014.01.038

PubMed ID

  • 24581497

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 156

issue

  • 5