Despite recent therapeutic advances, metastatic melanoma remains a disease with poor prognosis. Patients with primary melanomas that are clinically and histologically similar at the time of initial diagnosis often have vastly different outcomes, from patients who are cured after initial surgical resection to those that develop recurrence(s), metastatic progression, and eventually die. Such highly variable outcomes suggest underlying biological differences in patient tumors (cell-intrinsic) or the patients themselves (cell-extrinsic, e.g. immune response). Recent studies suggest that early tumorigenic events can reflect a melanoma's potential to spread. Conceptually, if such molecular alterations can be robustly measured at the time of melanoma diagnosis, they may be useful prognostic markers. Moreover, some of these markers may also be functional drivers of disease progression, thus their study may yield novel insights into melanoma biology and new therapeutic targets. We hypothesize that altered gene expression can predict patient outcome and, moreover, that some prognostic biomarkers are functional drivers of melanoma progression. Our group and others have observed that expression of various mRNA and microRNA (miRNA) may have prognostic value for patients with primary melanoma. We propose to examine the expression of a panel of ~230 mRNA/miRNA previously associated to poor outcomes in melanoma in a multi-institutional cohort of primary melanoma patients (n = 1000, stages IIA- IIIB at diagnosis) with extensive clinical follow-up. Using this expression data, we propose to develop and validate a refined tissue-based, molecular prognostic mRNA/miRNA signature for stages IIA to IIIB melanomas (Aims 1 and 2). In addition, we will investigate if candidate prognostic genes (as defined by each of the P01 projects) can be functional mediators of the aggressive phenotype. We propose to perform in vivo pooled library-based functional screens to examine the effects of modulation of candidate prognostic genes on tumor growth and metastatic potential of melanoma cells (Aim 3.1). Moreover, we will investigate cellular properties underlying the effects of functionally relevant candidate genes identified in in vivo screens (Aim 3.2). A molecular signature that, at initial diagnosis, can reliably predict outcomes for primary melanoma patients could transform clinical management of these individuals, informing selection of higher-risk patients for increased surveillance and/or adjuvant therapy. The hope is that better melanoma patient management will lead to improved outcomes, such as prolonging patient survival or reducing morbidity and mortality. In addition, the described functional studies will reveal candidate genes (from all projects of the P01) that contribute to melanoma progression and metastasis, which might open new therapeutic avenues against this devastating disease. !

Public Health Relevance

The goal of this project is two fold: i) to develop a molecular signature that improves stratification of early-stage melanoma patients by risk of dying from their cancer, and ii) to uncover novel determinants of melanoma aggressive behavior. A combined mRNA and microRNA expression signature measured in primary tumors could improve the accuracy of melanoma prognosis, better inform patient management and treatment decisions, and consequently improve survival outcomes. Moreover, identifying novel regulators of melanoma progression (recurrence and/or metastasis) could yield new targets for therapeutic intervention. !

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Program Projects (P01)
Project #
5P01CA206980-04
Application #
9938491
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZCA1)
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
2020-06-01
Budget End
2021-05-31
Support Year
4
Fiscal Year
2020
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center
Department
Type
DUNS #
829868723
City
Albuquerque
State
NM
Country
United States
Zip Code
87131
Thomas, Nancy E; Edmiston, Sharon N; Orlow, Irene et al. (2018) Inherited Genetic Variants Associated with Melanoma BRAF/NRAS Subtypes. J Invest Dermatol 138:2398-2404
Gorlov, Ivan; Orlow, Irene; Ringelberg, Carol et al. (2018) Identification of gene expression levels in primary melanoma associated with clinically meaningful characteristics. Melanoma Res 28:380-389
Miles, Jonathan A; Orlow, Irene; Kanetsky, Peter A et al. (2018) Relationship of Chromosome Arm 10q Variants to Occurrence of Multiple Primary Melanoma in the Population-Based GEM Study. J Invest Dermatol :
Gorlov, Ivan P; Pikielny, Claudio W; Frost, Hildreth R et al. (2018) Gene characteristics predicting missense, nonsense and frameshift mutations in tumor samples. BMC Bioinformatics 19:430
Thomas, Nancy E; Edmiston, Sharon N; Tsai, Yihsuan S et al. (2018) Utility of TERT Promoter Mutations for Cutaneous Primary Melanoma Diagnosis. Am J Dermatopathol :