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BRD4 sustains melanoma proliferation and represents a new target for epigenetic therapy

  • Miguel F. Segura
  • , Bárbara Fontanals-Cirera
  • , Avital Gaziel-Sovran
  • , María V. Guijarro
  • , Doug Hanniford
  • , Guangtao Zhang
  • , Pilar González-Gomez
  • , Marta Morante
  • , Luz Jubierre
  • , Weijia Zhang
  • , Farbod Darvishian
  • , Michael Ohlmeyer
  • , Iman Osman
  • , Ming Ming Zhou
  • , Eva Hernando

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

217 Scopus citations

Abstract

Metastatic melanoma remains a mostly incurable disease. Although newly approved targeted therapies are efficacious in a subset of patients, resistance and relapse rapidly ensue. Alternative therapeutic strategies to manipulate epigenetic regulators and disrupt the transcriptional program that maintains tumor cell identity are emerging. Bromodomain and extraterminal domain (BET) proteins are epigenome readers known to exert key roles at the interface between chromatin remodeling and transcriptional regulation. Here, we report that BRD4, a BET family member, is significantly upregulated in primary and metastatic melanoma tissues compared with melanocytes and nevi. Treatment with BET inhibitors impaired melanoma cell proliferation in vitro and tumor growth and metastatic behavior in vivo, effects that were mostly recapitulated by individual silencing of BRD4. RNA sequencing of BET inhibitor-treated cells followed by Gene Ontology analysis showed a striking impact on transcriptional programs controlling cell growth, proliferation, cell-cycle regulation, and differentiation. In particular, we found that, rapidly after BET displacement, key cell-cycle genes (SKP2, ERK1, and c-MYC) were downregulated concomitantly with the accumulation of cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) inhibitors (p21 and p27), followed by cell-cycle arrest. Importantly, BET inhibitor efficacy was not influenced by BRAFor NRAS mutational status, opening the possibility of using these small-molecule compounds to treat patients for whom no effective targeted therapy exists. Collectively, our study reveals a critical role for BRD4 in melanoma tumor maintenance and renders it a legitimate and novel target for epigenetic therapy directed against the core transcriptional program of melanoma.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)6264-6276
Number of pages13
JournalCancer Research
Volume73
Issue number20
DOIs
StatePublished - 15 Oct 2013

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