Cell Reports
Volume 15, Issue 1, 5 April 2016, Pages 171-180
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Article
Suppression of Type I Interferon Signaling Overcomes Oncogene-Induced Senescence and Mediates Melanoma Development and Progression

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2016.03.006Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Type I IFNs contribute to development of the oncogene-induced senescence

  • Suppression of IFN signaling suffices to induce melanoma by activated Braf

  • IFN signaling in melanocytes and other cell types counteracts melanoma development

  • Downregulation of IFN receptor IFNAR1 promotes melanoma development and progression

Summary

Oncogene activation induces DNA damage responses and cell senescence. We report a key role of type I interferons (IFNs) in oncogene-induced senescence. IFN signaling-deficient melanocytes expressing activated Braf do not exhibit senescence and develop aggressive melanomas. Restoration of IFN signaling in IFN-deficient melanoma cells induces senescence and suppresses melanoma progression. Additional data from human melanoma patients and mouse transplanted tumor models suggest the importance of non-cell-autonomous IFN signaling. Inactivation of the IFN pathway is mediated by the IFN receptor IFNAR1 downregulation that invariably occurs during melanoma development. Mice harboring an IFNAR1 mutant, which is partially resistant to downregulation, delay melanoma development, suppress metastatic disease, and better respond to BRAF or PD-1 inhibitors. These results suggest that IFN signaling is an important tumor-suppressive pathway that inhibits melanoma development and progression and argue for targeting IFNAR1 downregulation to prevent metastatic disease and improve the efficacy of molecularly target and immune-targeted melanoma therapies.

Keywords

melanoma
type I interferon
interferon receptor
senescence
BRAF
metastasis

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