Fluvastatin exerts an antitumor effect in vemurafenib-resistant melanoma cells

Although vemurafenib has been shown to improve the overall survival of patients with metastatic melanoma harboring the BRAF V600E mutation, its efficacy is often hampered by drug resistance acquired within a relatively short period through several distinct mechanisms. In the present study, we investigated the effect of fluvastatin as a possible strategy to overcome such acquired resistance using a cultured cell line model. We established vemurafenib-resistant (VR) cells from three BRAF (V600E)-mutated melanoma lines (C32, HMY-1, and SK-MEL-28) and evaluated the mechanism of acquired resistance of VR cells by water-soluble tetrazolium salts assay, western blot, real-time quantitative PCR, and immunofluorescent microscopy. The efficacy of the combination of growth inhibitory effect of vemurafenib and fluvastatin on respective parental and VR cells were assessed by calculating combination index and western blot. IC50 values of three VR cells were ~5–100-fold higher than those for the respective parental cells. The VR cells derived from HMY-1 and SK-MEL-28 showed constitutive activation of AKT kinase, and the specific AKT inhibitor MK-2208 or the PI3K inhibitor wortmannin increased the cellular sensitivity to vemurafenib. Intriguingly, application of a statin-related drug, fluvastatin, also resulted in a synergistic increase of sensitivity to vemurafenib in the VR cells (combination index: 0.73–0.86) probably by alleviating constitutive AKT activation, whereas the same treatm...
Source: Anti-Cancer Drugs - Category: Cancer & Oncology Tags: PRECLINICAL REPORTS Source Type: research