A heterodimer of hemoglobin identifies theranostic targets on brain-metastasizing melanoma cells.

Publication Title

International journal of cancer. Journal international du cancer

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

8-15-2025

Keywords

california; sjci; santa monica

Abstract

Cancer microenvironments encompass both cancer-promoting and cancer-restraining factors. If these factors cancel each other, cancer dormancy may ensue. In search of microenvironmental factors that keep dormant lung-metastasizing neuroblastoma cells and brain-metastasizing melanoma cells (BMMC) in check, we identified the beta subunit of hemoglobin and a heterodimer of alpha and beta chains of hemoglobin (α/β dimer) in the lung and brain microenvironments, respectively, as anti-metastatic factors. A previous study demonstrated that the α/β dimer triggers programmed cell death of BMMC and downregulates the expression of BRD4, GAB2, and IRS2 proteins, which perform essential functions in tumorigenesis and progression. The working hypothesis of the present study is that in addition to its tumoricidal function, the α/β dimer serves as a pathfinder for the identification of therapy targets for BMMC. We, therefore, employed small-molecule inhibitors of Bromodomain-containing protein 4 (BRD4), GRB2-associated-binding protein 2 (GAB2), and Insulin receptor substrate 2 (IRS2) as potential anti-BMMC agents. A combination of sub-lethal concentrations of BRD4 and IRS2 inhibitors synergistically arrested BMMC at the subG1 phase of the cell cycle and killed more than 70% of BMMCs. The BRD4/IRS2 inhibitor cocktail (designated hereafter as BRIRi) moderated the malignancy of BMMC lines from four different human melanomas. Preliminary results suggest that the BRIRi modulated "cold" BMMC to "hot" ones. Among the top enriched functions of differentially expressed genes identified by RNAseq of BRIRi-treated versus control BMMC, TNF and apoptotic signaling pathways were observed. We propose that co-targeting BRD4 and IRS2 offers a promising approach for treating BMMC.

Area of Special Interest

Cancer

Specialty/Research Institute

Oncology

DOI

10.1002/ijc.35458

Share

COinS