Cancer Cell
Volume 39, Issue 8, 9 August 2021, Pages 1135-1149.e8
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Article
Evolutionary predictability of genetic versus nongenetic resistance to anticancer drugs in melanoma

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ccell.2021.05.015Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Tumors recurrently select either a genetic or nongenetic drug resistance trajectory

  • FAK signaling is activated in melanoma drug persisters with a neural crest-like state

  • Targeting neural crest-like cells prevents nongenetic drug resistance evolution

  • The cellular composition of MRD dictates the evolutionary path to resistance

Summary

Therapy resistance arises from heterogeneous drug-tolerant persister cells or minimal residual disease (MRD) through genetic and nongenetic mechanisms. A key question is whether specific molecular features of the MRD ecosystem determine which of these two distinct trajectories will eventually prevail. We show that, in melanoma exposed to mitogen-activated protein kinase therapeutics, emergence of a transient neural crest stem cell (NCSC) population in MRD concurs with the development of nongenetic resistance. This increase relies on a glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor-dependent signaling cascade, which activates the AKT survival pathway in a focal adhesion kinase (FAK)-dependent manner. Ablation of the NCSC population through FAK inhibition delays relapse in patient-derived tumor xenografts. Strikingly, all tumors that ultimately escape this treatment exhibit resistance-conferring genetic alterations and increased sensitivity to extracellular signal-regulated kinase inhibition. These findings identify an approach that abrogates the nongenetic resistance trajectory in melanoma and demonstrate that the cellular composition of MRD deterministically imposes distinct drug resistance evolutionary paths.

Keywords

therapy resistance
nongenetic reprogramming
cutaneous melanoma
neural crest stem cells
FAK signaling
minimal residual disease
patient-derived tumor xenografts
single-cell sequencing

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