Ibrutinib Blocks YAP1 Activation and Reverses BRAF Inhibitor Resistance in Melanoma Cells
Sean A. Misek, Patrick A. Newbury, Evgenii Chekalin, Shreya Paithankar, Andrea I. Doseff, Bin Chen, Kathleen A. Gallo and Richard R. Neubig
Molecular Pharmacology January 2022, 101 (1) 1-12;
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1124/molpharm.121.000331
Abstract
Most B-Raf proto-oncogene (BRAF)–mutant melanoma tumors respond initially to BRAF
inhibitor (BRAFi)/mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase 1 inhibitor (MEKi) therapy,
although few patients have durable long-term responses to these agents. The goal of
this study was to use an unbiased computational approach to identify inhibitors that
reverse an experimentally derived BRAFi resistance gene expression signature. Using
this approach, we found that ibrutinib effectively reverses this signature, and we
demonstrate experimentally that ibrutinib resensitizes a subset of BRAFi-resistant
melanoma cells to vemurafenib. Ibrutinib is used clinically as an inhibitor of the
Src family kinase Bruton tyrosine kinase (BTK); however, neither BTK deletion nor
treatment with acalabrutinib, another BTK inhibitor with reduced off-target activity,
resensitized cells to vemurafenib. These data suggest that ibrutinib acts through
a BTK-independent mechanism in vemurafenib resensitization. To better understand this
mechanism, we analyzed the transcriptional profile of ibrutinib-treated BRAFi-resistant
melanoma cells and found that the transcriptional profile of ibrutinib was highly
similar to that of multiple Src proto-oncogene kinase inhibitors. Since ibrutinib,
but not acalabrutinib, has appreciable off-target activity against multiple Src family
kinases, it suggests that ibrutinib may be acting through this mechanism. Furthermore,
genes that are differentially expressed in ibrutinib-treated cells are enriched in
Yes1-associated transcriptional regulator (YAP1) target genes, and we showed that
ibrutinib, but not acalabrutinib, reduces YAP1 activity in BRAFi-resistant melanoma
cells. Taken together, these data suggest that ibrutinib, or other Src family kinase
inhibitors, may be useful for treating some BRAFi/MEKi-refractory melanoma tumors.