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Targeting Rad51 as a strategy for the treatment of melanoma cells resistant to MAPK pathway inhibition

Elena Makino, Lisa Marie Fröhlich, Tobias Sinnberg, Corinna Kosnopfel, Birgit Sauer, Claus Garbe, Birgit Schittek

2020Cell Death and Disease30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Rad51 is an essential factor of the homologous recombination DNA repair pathway and therefore plays an important role in maintaining genomic stability. We show that RAD51 and other homologous recombination repair genes are overexpressed in metastatic melanoma cell lines and in melanoma patient samples, which correlates with reduced survival of melanoma patients. In addition, Rad51 expression in melanoma cells was regulated on a transcriptional level by the MAPK signaling pathway with Elk1 as the main downstream transcriptional effector. Most strikingly, melanoma cells which developed resistance towards MAPK inhibitors could be efficiently targeted by Rad51 inhibitors similar to their sensitive counterparts, leading to DNA damage, G2/M arrest and apoptosis. Furthermore, the treatment of MAPK inhibitor resistant cells with Rad51 inhibitors enhances the susceptibility of these cells for MAPK inhibitor treatment in vitro and in vivo. These data indicate that Rad51 plays a critical role in the survival of metastatic melanoma cells and is a promising target for the therapy of melanoma irrespective of its MAPK inhibitor resistance status.

Topics & Concepts

RAD51MelanomaMAPK/ERK pathwayHomologous recombinationCancer researchBiologyDNA damageEffectorApoptosisDNA repairIn vivoCell biologyDNASignal transductionGeneticsDNA Repair MechanismsMelanoma and MAPK PathwaysPARP inhibition in cancer therapy