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    MYC's key role in oncogenesis and tumor progression has long been established for most human cancers. In melanoma, its deregulated activity by amplification of 8q24 chromosome or by upstream signaling coming from activating mutations in the RAS/RAF/MAPK pathway-the most predominantly mutated pathway in this disease-turns MYC into not only a driver but also a facilitator of melanoma progression, with documented effects leading to an aggressive clinical course and resistance to targeted therapy. Here, by making use of Omomyc, the most characterized MYC inhibitor to date that has just successfully completed a phase I clinical trial, we show for the first time that MYC inhibition in melanoma induces remarkable transcriptional modulation, resulting in severely compromised tumor growth and a clear abrogation of metastatic capacity independently of the driver mutation. By reducing MYC's transcriptional footprint in melanoma, Omomyc elicits gene expression profiles remarkably similar to those of patients with good prognosis, underlining the therapeutic potential that such an approach could eventually have in the clinic in this dismal disease. © 2023 Zacarías-Fluck et al.; Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press.

    Citation

    Mariano F Zacarías-Fluck, Daniel Massó-Vallés, Fabio Giuntini, Íñigo González-Larreategui, Jastrinjan Kaur, Sílvia Casacuberta-Serra, Toni Jauset, Sandra Martínez-Martín, Génesis Martín-Fernández, Erika Serrano Del Pozo, Laia Foradada, Judit Grueso, Lara Nonell, Marie-Eve Beaulieu, Jonathan R Whitfield, Laura Soucek. Reducing MYC's transcriptional footprint unveils a good prognostic gene signature in melanoma. Genes & development. 2023 Apr 01;37(7-8):303-320

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    PMID: 37024284

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