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BRAF and MEK inhibitor therapy eliminates Nestin-expressing melanoma cells in human tumors


AUTHORS

Doxie DBDeon B , Greenplate ARAllison R , Gandelman JSJocelyn S , Diggins KEKirsten E , Roe CECaroline E , Dahlman KBKimberly B , Sosman JAJeffrey A , Kelley MCMark C , Irish JMJonathan M . Pigment cell & melanoma research. 2018 06 28; 31(6). 708-719

ABSTRACT

Little is known about the in vivo impacts of targeted therapy on melanoma cell abundance and protein expression. Here, 21 antibodies were added to an established melanoma mass cytometry panel to measure 32 cellular features, distinguish malignant cells, and characterize dabrafenib and trametinib responses in BRAF melanoma. Tumor cells were biopsied before neoadjuvant therapy and compared to cells surgically resected from the same site after 4 weeks of therapy. Approximately 50,000 cells per tumor were characterized by mass cytometry and computational tools t-SNE/viSNE, FlowSOM, and MEM. The resulting single-cell view of melanoma treatment response revealed initially heterogeneous melanoma tumors were consistently cleared of Nestin-expressing melanoma cells. Melanoma cell subsets that persisted to week 4 were heterogeneous but expressed SOX2 or SOX10 proteins and specifically lacked surface expression of MHC I proteins by MEM analysis. Traditional histology imaging of tissue microarrays from the same tumors confirmed mass cytometry results, including persistence of NES- SOX10+ S100β+ melanoma cells. This quantitative single-cell view of melanoma treatment response revealed protein features of malignant cells that are not eliminated by targeted therapy.