AI Article Synopsis

  • The traditional method for creating kinase inhibitors in cancer treatment involves using a strong inhibitor to validate the target, which can lead to issues like drug toxicity and off-target effects.
  • Researchers developed inducible short-hairpin RNA models to study the effectiveness of blocking the oncogenic BRAF protein, finding that tumor regression can be activated and reversed in these models.
  • Their findings indicate that BRAF promotes tumor cell growth and survival, making it a significant target for new treatments like small molecules and RNA interference in melanoma.

Article Abstract

The usual paradigm for developing kinase inhibitors in oncology is to use a high-affinity proof-of-concept inhibitor with acceptable metabolic properties for key target validation experiments. This approach requires substantial medicinal chemistry and can be confounded by drug toxicity and off-target activities of the test molecule. As a better alternative, we have developed inducible short-hairpin RNA xenograft models to examine the in vivo efficacy of inhibiting oncogenic BRAF. Our results show that tumor regression resulting from BRAF suppression is inducible, reversible, and tightly regulated in these models. Analysis of regressing tumors showed the primary mechanism of action for BRAF to be increased tumor cell proliferation and survival. In a metastatic melanoma model, conditional BRAF suppression slowed systemic tumor growth as determined by in vivo bioluminescence imaging. Taken together, gain-of-function BRAF signaling is strongly associated with in vivo tumorigenicity, confirming BRAF as an important target for small-molecule and RNA interference-based therapeutics.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-05-2720DOI Listing

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