Por favor, use este identificador para citar o enlazar este ítem: https://doi.org/10.1101/gad.290940.116

Título: Translation reprogramming is an evolutionarily conserved driver of phenotypic plasticity and therapeutic resistance in melanoma
Fecha de publicación: 17-ene-2017
Editorial: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
Cita bibliográfica: Genes & Development, 2017, Vol. 31, pp. 18-33
ISSN: Print: 0890-9369
Electronic: 1549-5477
Palabras clave: Melanoma
Glutamine
Phenotypic plasticity
ER Stress
MITF
ATF4
Tumor microenvironment
Resumen: The intratumor microenvironment generates phenotypically distinct but interconvertible malignant cell subpopulations that fuel metastatic spread and therapeutic resistance. Whether different microenvironmental cues impose invasive or therapy-resistant phenotypes via a common mechanism is unknown. In melanoma, low expression of the lineage survival oncogene microphthalmia-associated transcription factor (MITF) correlates with invasion, senescence, and drug resistance. However, how MITF is suppressed in vivo and how MITF-low cells in tumors escape senescence are poorly understood. Here we show that microenvironmental cues, including inflammation-mediated resistance to adoptive T-cell immunotherapy, transcriptionally repress MITF via ATF4 in response to inhibition of translation initiation factor eIF2B. ATF4, a key transcription mediator of the integrated stress response, also activates AXL and suppresses senescence to impose the MITF-low/AXL-high drug-resistant phenotype observed in human tumors. However, unexpectedly, without translation reprogramming an ATF4-high/MITF-low state is insufficient to drive invasion. Importantly, translation reprogramming dramatically enhances tumorigenesis and is linked to a previously unexplained gene expression program associated with anti-PD-1 immunotherapy resistance. Since we show that inhibition of eIF2B also drives neural crest migration and yeast invasiveness, our results suggest that translation reprogramming, an evolutionarily conserved starvation response, has been hijacked by microenvironmental stress signals in melanoma to drive phenotypic plasticity and invasion and determine therapeutic outcome.
Autor/es principal/es: Falletta, Paola
Sánchez del Campo Ferrer, Luis
Chauhan, Jagat
Effern, Maike
Kenyon, Amy
Kershaw, Christopher J.
Siddaway, Robert
Lisle, Richard
Freter, Rasmus
Daniels, Matthew J.
Lu, Xin
Tüting, Thomas
Middleton, Mark
Buffa, Francesca M.
Willis, Anne E.
Pavitt, Graham
Ronai, Ze’ev A.
Sauka Spengler, Tatjana
Hölzel, Michael
Goding, Colin R.
Facultad/Departamentos/Servicios: Facultades, Departamentos, Servicios y Escuelas::Departamentos de la UMU::Bioquímica y Biología Molecular A
Versión del editor: https://genesdev.cshlp.org/content/31/1/18
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10201/147268
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1101/gad.290940.116
Tipo de documento: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Número páginas / Extensión: 16
Derechos: info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Atribución-NoComercial 4.0 Internacional
Descripción: © 2017 Falletta et al. This manuscript version is made available under the CC-BY-NC-4.0 license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This document is the Published version of a Published Work that appeared in final form in Genes & Development. To access the final edited and published work see https://doi.org/10.1101/gad.290940.116
Aparece en las colecciones:Artículos: Bioquímica y Biología Molecular "A"

Ficheros en este ítem:
Fichero Descripción TamañoFormato 
18.pdf705,29 kBAdobe PDFVista previa
Visualizar/Abrir


Este ítem está sujeto a una licencia Creative Commons Licencia Creative Commons Creative Commons