Rho kinase inhibitors block melanoma cell migration and inhibit metastasis
Authors list
Amine Sadok Afshan McCarthy John Caldwell Ian Collins Michelle D Garrett Maggie Yeo Steven Hooper Erik Sahai Sandra Kuemper Faraz K Mardakheh Christopher J MarshallAbstract
There is an urgent need to identify new therapeutic opportunities for metastatic melanoma. Fragment-based screening has led to the discovery of orally available, ATP-competitive AKT kinase inhibitors, AT13148 and CCT129254. These compounds also inhibit the Rho-kinases ROCK 1 and ROCK 2 and we show they potently inhibit ROCK activity in melanoma cells in culture and in vivo. Treatment of melanoma cells with CCT129254 or AT13148 dramatically reduces cell invasion, impairing both "amoeboid-like" and mesenchymal-like modes of invasion in culture. Intravital imaging shows that CCT129254 or AT13148 treatment reduces the motility of melanoma cells in vivo. CCT129254 inhibits melanoma metastasis when administered 2 days after orthotopic intradermal injection of the cells, or when treatment starts after metastases have arisen. Mechanistically, our data suggest that inhibition of ROCK reduces the ability of melanoma cells to efficiently colonize the lungs. These results suggest that these novel inhibitors of ROCK may be beneficial in the treatment of metastasis.
Journal details
Journal Cancer Research
Volume 75
Issue number 11
Pages 2272-2284
Available online
Publication date
Full text links
Publisher website (DOI) 10.1158/0008-5472.can-14-2156
Europe PubMed Central 25840982
Pubmed 25840982
Keywords
Related topics
Type of publication