Pharmacologic suppression of MITF expression via HDAC inhibitors in the melanocyte lineage

Satoru Yokoyama(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Erez Feige(Boston Children's Hospital), Laura L. Poling(Boston Children's Hospital), Carmit Levy(Boston Children's Hospital), Hans R. Widlund(Boston Children's Hospital), Mehdi Khaled(Boston Children's Hospital), Andrew L. Kung(Boston Children's Hospital), David E. Fisher(Mass General Brigham)
Pigment Cell & Melanoma Research
June 5, 2008
Cited by 103Open Access
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Abstract

Melanoma incidence continues to rise at an alarming rate while effective systemic therapies remain very limited. Microphthalmia-associated transcription factor (MITF) is required for development of melanocytes and is an amplified oncogene in a fraction of human melanomas. Microphthalmia-associated transcription factor also plays an oncogenic role in human clear cell sarcomas, which typically exhibit melanoma-like features. Although pharmacologic suppression of MITF is of potential interest in a variety of clinical settings, it is not known to contain intrinsic catalytic activity capable of direct small molecule inhibition. An alternative drug-targeting strategy is to identify and interfere with lineage-restricted mechanisms required for its expression. Here, we report that multiple histone deacetylase (HDAC)-inhibitor drugs potently suppress MITF expression in melanocytes, melanoma and clear cell sarcoma cells. Although HDAC inhibitors may affect numerous cellular targets, we observed suppression of skin pigmentation by topical drug application as well as evidence of anti-melanoma efficacy in vitro and in mouse xenografts. Consequently, HDAC inhibitor drugs are candidates to play therapeutic roles in targeting conditions affecting the melanocyte lineage.


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