Publication: Targeted activation of innate immunity for therapeutic induction of autophagy and apoptosis in melanoma cells.
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Abstract
Inappropriate drug delivery, secondary toxicities, and persistent chemo- and immunoresistance have traditionally compromised treatment response in melanoma. Using cellular systems and genetically engineered mouse models, we show that melanoma cells retain an innate ability to recognize cytosolic double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) and mount persistent stress response programs able to block tumor growth, even in highly immunosuppressed backgrounds. The dsRNA mimic polyinosine-polycytidylic acid, coadministered with polyethyleneimine as carrier, was identified as an unanticipated inducer of autophagy downstream of an exacerbated endosomal maturation program. A concurrent activity of the dsRNA helicase MDA-5 driving the proapoptotic protein NOXA resulted in an efficient autodigestion of melanoma cells. These results reveal tractable links for therapeutic intervention among dsRNA helicases, endo/lysosomes, and apoptotic factors.
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This study was initiated at the University of Michigan Department of Dermatology and the authors thank all of our colleagues there, particularly Monique Verhaegen, MaryBeth Ribblet, Keith Wolter, and Anj Dlugosz for their help and support. We also thank Jose Esteban (Center for Molecular Biology, Spain) for critical reading of this manuscript and Gabriel Nunez (University of Michigan), Marino Zerial (Max Planck Institute, Germany), and Terje Johansen (University of Tromso, Norway) for eGFP-LC3, eGFP-Rab7 (WT and T22N), and Cherry-GFP-LC3, respectively. We also thank Friedrich Beermann (ISREC, Switzerland) for the Tyr.-:NRASQ61K mice and Guillermo Velasco (Universidad Complutense, Spain) and Patricia Boya (CIB, Spain) for Bax/Bak- and Atg5-deficient MEFs. This work was supported by grants NIH R01 CA107237 and Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation SAF2008-1950 (M.S.S.), R01 GM068448 (P.B.F.), and Tu90-6/1 and DKH 10741 (T.T.); and institutional grants from the Asociacion Espahola Contra el Cancer and Spanish National Cancer Research Centre (M.S.S.). P.B.F. holds the Thelma Newmeyer Corman Chair in Cancer Research at the Virginia Commonwealth University Massey Cancer Center. D.T. and D.A.-C. are recipients of a Juan de la Cierva Postdoctoral Fellowship and a Scientists in Training Predoctoral Fellowship, respectively, from the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation. E.R.-F. is the recipient of a post-residency training program from "Obra Social de Caja Navarra."
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Cancer Cell . 2009 Aug 4;16(2):103-14.





