4.3 Article

The repurposed anthelmintic mebendazole in combination with trametinib suppresses refractory NRASQ61K melanoma

Journal

ONCOTARGET
Volume 8, Issue 8, Pages 12576-12595

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.14990

Keywords

mebendazole; drug repurposing; melanoma; ERK pathway; BRAF

Funding

  1. Developmental funds from the Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center
  2. MedStar-Georgetown partnership grant
  3. DOD grant [CA140882]
  4. [NIH-R01 CA170653]

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Structure-based drug repositioning in addition to random chemical screening is now a viable route to rapid drug development. Proteochemometric computational methods coupled with kinase assays showed that mebendazole (MBZ) binds and inhibits kinases important in cancer, especially both BRAF(WT) and BRAF(V600E). We find that MBZ synergizes with the MEK inhibitor trametinib to inhibit growth of BRAF(WT)-NRAS(Q61K) melanoma cells in culture and in xenografts, and markedly decreased MEK and ERK phosphorylation. Reverse Phase Protein Array (RPPA) and immunoblot analyses show that both trametinib and MBZ inhibit the MAPK pathway, and cluster analysis revealed a protein cluster showing strong MBZ+trametinib - inhibited phosphorylation of MEK and ERK within 10 minutes, and its direct and indirect downstream targets related to stress response and translation, including EIK1 and RSKs within 30 minutes. Downstream ERK targets for cell cycle, including cMYC, were down-regulated, consistent with S-phase suppression by MBZ+trametinib, while apoptosis markers, including cleaved caspase-3, cleaved PARP and a sub-G1 population, were all increased with time. These data suggest that MBZ, a well-tolerated off-patent approved drug, should be considered as a therapeutic option in combination with trametinib, for patients with NRAS(Q61mut) or other non-V600E BRAF mutant melanomas.

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