Molecular genetics of cutaneous malignant melanoma

University dissertation from Stockholm : Karolinska Institutet, Department of Oncology-Pathology

Abstract: Cutaneous malignant melanoma is an aggressive tumor of melanocytes in the skin with rapidly increasing incidence. Patients with advanced disease have a poor prognosis since the tumor is usually resistant to current therapies. Therefore, the development of novel strategies for preventing and treating melanoma is important. To explore novel therapies we need to find appropriate targets and for that knowledge about the biology of melanoma is important. There is growing evidence suggesting that NRAS has an important role in tumorigenesis and tumor maintenance in malignant melanoma and that the RAS-RAF-ERK signaling pathway is constitutively activated through multiple mechanisms, one of which is activating mutations in NRAS gene. In an initial study, we investigated the occurrence of activating mutation in the NRAS gene in a subset of patients with hereditary melanoma carrying germ line CDKN2A alterations. From this study we found differences in the frequency of NRAS mutations between hereditary and sporadic melanomas. Activating mutations in NRAS codon 61 were found in 95% (20/21) of primary hereditary melanomas but in only 10% (1/10) of sporadic melanomas. We also detected multiple activating NRAS mutations in tumor cells from different regions of individual primary hereditary melanomas. We concluded that the high frequency of NRAS codon 61 mutations detected in these hereditary melanomas may be the result of a hypermutability phenotype associated with the hereditary predisposition for melanoma development in patients with germline CDKN2A mutations. The presence of a mutant NRAS oncogene in sporadic and familial melanomas implies that the NRAS oncogene may be an important target for prevention and treatment of melanomas. Therefore, to better define the role of this oncogene in melanoma development, we specifically targeted this mutant oncogene using RNAi techniques and studied the effect of suppression of mutant NRAS on melanoma cell lines. Suppression of oncogenic NRAS in these cell lines resulted in decreased proliferation, increased apoptosis as well as decreased phosphorylation of ERK and Akt, and also reduced expression of NF-kappaB and cyclin D1 downstream in the NRAS signaling pathway. To follow up this investigation, we studied the effect of siRNA against mutant NRAS on gene expression profiles in melanoma cell lines which carry oncogenic NRAS mutations. We could show the impact of knockdown of the NRAS oncogene on different cellular processes. For instance, we observed a disability of cells with respect to migration and invasion, which is accompanied by down-regulation of EphA2, uPAR and cytoskeleton proteins such as leupaxin, alpha-actinin, paxillin, and vinculin. These cells also showed inhibition of cell proliferation accompanied by downregulation of two cyclins, cyclin D1, cyclin E2, and up-regulation of HBP1 repressor. In summary, we conclude that the use of siRNAs against NRASQ61R is an important tool in suppressing oncogenic NRAS signaling, which might contribute to the development of more specific melanoma therapy in the subset of patients with tumor with NRAS mutations.

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