UCLA RESEARCH ALERT

FINDINGS

Melanoma, a relatively rare but deadly skin cancer, has been shown to switch differentiation states — that is, to regress to an earlier stage of development — which can lead it to become resistant to treatment. Now, UCLA researchers have found that melanomas can be divided into four distinct subtypes according to their stages of differentiation. Cell subtypes that de-differentiated — meaning that they reverted back to a less-mature cell — showed sensitivity to a type of self-inflicted cell death called ferroptosis.

The research also showed that certain subtypes of melanoma cells could be successfully treated using multiple cancer therapies in combination with ferroptosis-inducing drugs.

BACKGROUND

Melanoma arises from melanocytes, cells that produce pigments. Although targeted therapies and a greater understanding of cancer immunology have significantly improved survival, many patients either relapse or do not respond to treatment.

METHOD

The UCLA team, led by Dr. Thomas Graeber, analyzed the gene expression of melanoma cells and compared them to information in public genetic databases to identify the four different subtypes of melanoma with different drug sensitivities. The team organized the melanoma cells according to characteristic patterns of genes turned on by the cells. Comparing the gene expression patterns to data from stem cells induced to differentiate into melanocytes, they found that melanomas can be categorized into four distinct differentiation states.

“This refined characterization improves our understanding of the progressive changes that occur in melanoma cells during dedifferentiation, which can help develop better strategies to target this form of therapy resistance,” said Jennifer Tsoi, who was a member of the research team as a UCLA graduate student and now is a postdoctoral fellow at UCLA.

The investigators then searched pharmacogenomics databases for compounds that could best be used to treat melanomas characterized by the dedifferentiation expression pattern, either individually or in combination with other drugs.   

IMPACT

The study introduces a new area of therapeutic possibilities for melanoma, because it is the first to link ferroptosis to melanoma differentiation states. It also more precisely defines different subtypes of melanoma, based on specific gene expression and metabolic profiles. Those subtypes characterize four steps along a trajectory taken by melanoma cells as they respond to exogenous stresses, such as drug treatments. The approach for targeting dedifferentiated melanomas could complement existing standard-of-care therapies, since kinase inhibitors and immunotherapies are much more effective against differentiated cells than de-differentiated cells.

“Furthermore, these standard-of-care therapies can induce dedifferentiation, and thus in a co-treatment setting, ferroptosis induction can potentially block melanoma cells attempting to take this escape route,” Graeber said.

AUTHORS

Graeber is a professor of Molecular and Medical Pharmacology at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and a member of the UCLA Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center. Tsoi is the first author. Other authors, also of UCLA, are Dr. Lidia Robert, Kim Paraiso, Carlos Galvan, Katherine Sheu, Johnson Lay, Dr. Deborah Wong, Mohammad Atefi, Roksana Shirazi, Xiaoyan Wang, Daniel Braas, Catherine Grasso, Dr. Nicolaos Palaskas and Dr. Antoni Ribas.

JOURNAL

The research is published online in Cancer Cell.

FUNDING

The research was supported by grants from the National Cancer Institute, the American Cancer Society, the Melanoma Research Alliance, the Concern Foundation, the Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy, the Dr. Robert Vigen Memorial Fund, the Garcia-Corsini Family Fund, the Ressler Family Fund, and the Grimaldi Family Fund, the V Foundation–Gil Nickel Family Endowed Fellowship, and the Spanish Society of Medical Oncology for Translational Research in Reference Centers.

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY

In collaboration with Dr. Graeber, UCLA Technology Development Group has filed a provisional application based on this work.  For more information, please contact UCLA TDG at [email protected]

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The UCLA Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center has more than 500 researchers and clinicians engaged in cancer research, prevention, detection, control, treatment and education. One of the nation's largest comprehensive cancer centers, the UCLA Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center is dedicated to promoting research and translating basic science into leading-edge clinical studies.

Media contact Dr. Thomas Graeber is available for interviews. Please contact Denise Heady ([email protected]) at (310) 206-2805.