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- Netrin-1 and Its Receptor DCC Are Causally Implicated in Melanoma Progression
Netrin-1 and Its Receptor DCC Are Causally Implicated in Melanoma Progression
Auteurs
Amina Boussouar, Antonin Tortereau, Ambroise Manceau, Andrea Paradisi, Nicolas Gadot, Jonathan Vial, David Neves, Lionel Larue, Maxime Battistella, Christophe Leboeuf, Celeste Lebbé, Anne Janin, Patrick Mehlen
Résumé
Abstract
Deleted in colorectal cancer (DCC), the receptor for the multifunctional cue netrin-1, acts as a tumor suppressor in intestinal cancer and lung metastasis by triggering cancer cell death when netrin-1 is lowly expressed. Recent genomic data highlighted that DCC is the third most frequently mutated gene in melanoma; we therefore investigated whether DCC could act as a melanoma tumor suppressor. Reexpressing DCC in human melanoma cell lines promoted tumor cell death and tumor growth inhibition in xenograft mouse models. Genetic silencing of DCC prodeath activity in a BRAFV600E mouse model increased the proportion of mice with melanoma, further supporting that DCC is a melanoma tumor suppressor. Netrin-1 expression was elevated in melanoma compared with benign melanocytic lesions. Upregulation of netrin-1 in the skin cells of a BRAFV600E-mutated murine model reduced cancer cell death and promoted melanoma progression. Therapeutic antibody blockade of netrin-1 combined with dacarbazine increased overall survival in several mouse melanoma models. Together, these data support that interfering with netrin-1 could be a viable therapeutic approach in patients with netrin-1–expressing melanoma.
Significance:
Netrin-1 and its receptor DCC regulate melanoma progression, suggesting therapeutic targeting of this signaling axis as a viable option for melanoma treatment.
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