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  • Oxidative stress from DGAT1 oncoprotein inhibition in melanoma suppresses tumor growth when ROS defenses are also breached.

Oxidative stress from DGAT1 oncoprotein inhibition in melanoma suppresses tumor growth when ROS defenses are also breached.

Cell reports (2022-06-23)
Daniel J Wilcock, Andrew P Badrock, Chun W Wong, Rhys Owen, Melissa Guerin, Andrew D Southam, Hannah Johnston, Brian A Telfer, Paul Fullwood, Joanne Watson, Harriet Ferguson, Jennifer Ferguson, Gavin R Lloyd, Andris Jankevics, Warwick B Dunn, Claudia Wellbrock, Paul Lorigan, Craig Ceol, Chiara Francavilla, Michael P Smith, Adam F L Hurlstone
ABSTRACT

Dysregulated cellular metabolism is a cancer hallmark for which few druggable oncoprotein targets have been identified. Increased fatty acid (FA) acquisition allows cancer cells to meet their heightened membrane biogenesis, bioenergy, and signaling needs. Excess FAs are toxic to non-transformed cells but surprisingly not to cancer cells. Molecules underlying this cancer adaptation may provide alternative drug targets. Here, we demonstrate that diacylglycerol O-acyltransferase 1 (DGAT1), an enzyme integral to triacylglyceride synthesis and lipid droplet formation, is frequently up-regulated in melanoma, allowing melanoma cells to tolerate excess FA. DGAT1 over-expression alone transforms p53-mutant zebrafish melanocytes and co-operates with oncogenic BRAF or NRAS for more rapid melanoma formation. Antagonism of DGAT1 induces oxidative stress in melanoma cells, which adapt by up-regulating cellular reactive oxygen species defenses. We show that inhibiting both DGAT1 and superoxide dismutase 1 profoundly suppress tumor growth through eliciting intolerable oxidative stress.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-γ-Tubulin antibody, Mouse monoclonal, clone GTU-88, purified from hybridoma cell culture
Sigma-Aldrich
Trypsin from porcine pancreas, Proteomics Grade, BioReagent, Dimethylated
Sigma-Aldrich
LOX-IMVI Human Melanoma Cell Line, LOX-IMVI human melanoma cell line is an excellent model for probing mechanisms of metastasis and for evaluation of chemotherapies.