Login / Signup

Direct targeting of Gαq and Gα11 oncoproteins in cancer cells.

Suvi AnnalaXiaodong FengNaveen ShridharFunda EryilmazJulian PattJuHee YangEva M PfeilRodolfo Daniel Cervantes-VillagranaAsuka InoueFelix HäberleinTanja SlodczykRaphael ReherStefan KehrausStefania MonteleoneRamona SchrageNina HeyckeUlrike RickSandra EngelAlexander PfeiferPeter KolbGabriele KönigMoritz BünemannThomas TütingJosé Vázquez-PradoJorge Silvio GutkindEvelyn GaffalEvi Kostenis
Published in: Science signaling (2019)
Somatic gain-of-function mutations of GNAQ and GNA11, which encode α subunits of heterotrimeric Gαq/11 proteins, occur in about 85% of cases of uveal melanoma (UM), the most common cancer of the adult eye. Molecular therapies to directly target these oncoproteins are lacking, and current treatment options rely on radiation, surgery, or inhibition of effector molecules downstream of these G proteins. A hallmark feature of oncogenic Gαq/11 proteins is their reduced intrinsic rate of hydrolysis of guanosine triphosphate (GTP), which results in their accumulation in the GTP-bound, active state. Here, we report that the cyclic depsipeptide FR900359 (FR) directly interacted with GTPase-deficient Gαq/11 proteins and preferentially inhibited mitogenic ERK signaling rather than canonical phospholipase Cβ (PLCβ) signaling driven by these oncogenes. Thereby, FR suppressed the proliferation of melanoma cells in culture and inhibited the growth of Gαq-driven UM mouse xenografts in vivo. In contrast, FR did not affect tumor growth when xenografts carried mutated B-RafV600E as the oncogenic driver. Because FR enabled suppression of malignant traits in cancer cells that are driven by activating mutations at codon 209 in Gαq/11 proteins, we envision that similar approaches could be taken to blunt the signaling of non-Gαq/11 G proteins.
Keyphrases