MEK5/ERK5 inhibition sensitizes NRAS-mutant melanoma to MAPK-targeted therapy by preventing Cyclin D/CDK4-mediated G1/S progression
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ABSTRACT: Despite the advent of immune-oncological therapies, patients with advanced NRAS-mutant melanoma still have a significantly worse prognosis than their BRAF-mutant counterparts. This is mainly due to a high propensity for resistance to available therapies targeting the RAS/RAF/MEK/ERK mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway (MAPKi). Preclinical studies and mouse models have implicated the stress-activated MEK5/ERK5 MAPK cascade as a major resistance pathway activated by MAPKi-based targeted therapy in NRAS-mutant melanoma. Accordingly, MAPKi/ERK5i co-inhibition was capable of triggering a sustained cell cycle arrest in NRAS-mutant melanoma cells, but the key mediator(s) of its vigorous anti-proliferative effect remain elusive. Here, we further investigated the mechanism of MAPKi/ERK5i-induced cell cycle arrest in NRAS-mutant melanoma cells using both genetic methods and pharmacological inhibitors. Transcriptome analysis of human NRAS-mutant melanoma cells established that MAPKi/ERK5i-induced a near-complete shutdown of the mitotic machinery as consequence of a sustained G1 cell cycle arrest. This arrest was not only observed in diverse treatment-naïve melanoma cells but could also be induced in cells that already had developed resistance to therapeutic MEK inhibition (MEKi) and was accompanied by suppression of Cyclin D1 and E2F-mediated gene expression. Forced expression of Cyclin D1 and its effector kinase CDK4 restored cell cycle progression and mitotic gene expression in NRAS-mutant melanoma cells exposed to MEKi/ERK5i, implying Cyclin D/CDK4 activity as major target of combined MEKi/ERK5i. These findings suggest Cyclin D/CDK4 dependency as a major vulnerability of NRAS-mutant melanoma that could effectively be targeted by combined MAPKi/ERK5i.
ORGANISM(S): Homo sapiens
PROVIDER: GSE300191 | GEO | 2025/09/01
REPOSITORIES: GEO
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