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DOI: 10.1002/cam4.50
¤ OpenAccess: Green
This work has “Green” OA status. This means it may cost money to access on the publisher landing page, but there is a free copy in an OA repository.

Targeting hyperactivation of the <scp>AKT</scp> survival pathway to overcome therapy resistance of melanoma brain metastases

Heike Niessner,Andrea Forschner,Bernhard Klumpp,Jürgen Honegger,Maria Witte,Antje Bornemann,Reinhard Dummer,Annemarie Adam,Jürgen Bauer,Ghazaleh Tabatabai,Keith T. Flaherty,Tobias Sinnberg,Daniela Beck,Ulrike Leiter,Cornelia Mauch,Alexander Roesch,Benjamin Weide,Thomas Eigentler,Dirk Schadendorf,Claus Garbe,Dagmar Kulms,Leticia Quintanilla-Martı́nez,Friedegund Meier

Vemurafenib
Protein kinase B
Melanoma
2012
Brain metastases are the most common cause of death in patients with metastatic melanoma, and the RAF-MEK-ERK and PI3K-AKT signaling pathways are key players in melanoma progression and drug resistance. The BRAF inhibitor vemurafenib significantly improved overall survival. However, brain metastases still limit the effectiveness of this therapy. In a series of patients, we observed that treatment with vemurafenib resulted in substantial regression of extracerebral metastases, but brain metastases developed. This study aimed to identify factors that contribute to treatment resistance in brain metastases. Matched brain and extracerebral metastases from melanoma patients had identical ERK, p-ERK, and AKT immunohistochemistry staining patterns, but there was hyperactivation of AKT (p-AKT) and loss of PTEN expression in the brain metastases. Mutation analysis revealed no differences in BRAF, NRAS, or KIT mutation status in matched brain and extracerebral metastases. In contrast, AKT, p-AKT, and PTEN expression was identical in monolayer cultures derived from melanoma brain and extracerebral metastases. Furthermore, melanoma cells stimulated by astrocyte-conditioned medium showed higher AKT activation and invasiveness than melanoma cells stimulated by fibroblast-conditioned medium. Inhibition of PI3K-AKT signaling resensitized melanoma cells isolated from a vemurafenib-resistant brain metastasis to vemurafenib. Brain-derived factors appear to induce hyperactivation of the AKT survival pathway and to promote the survival and drug resistance of melanoma cells in the brain. Thus, inhibition of PI3K-AKT signaling shows potential for enhancing and/or prolonging the antitumor effect of BRAF inhibitors or other anticancer agents in melanoma brain metastases.
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    Targeting hyperactivation of the <scp>AKT</scp> survival pathway to overcome therapy resistance of melanoma brain metastases” is a paper by Heike Niessner Andrea Forschner Bernhard Klumpp Jürgen Honegger Maria Witte Antje Bornemann Reinhard Dummer Annemarie Adam Jürgen Bauer Ghazaleh Tabatabai Keith T. Flaherty Tobias Sinnberg Daniela Beck Ulrike Leiter Cornelia Mauch Alexander Roesch Benjamin Weide Thomas Eigentler Dirk Schadendorf Claus Garbe Dagmar Kulms Leticia Quintanilla-Martı́nez Friedegund Meier published in 2012. It has an Open Access status of “green”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.