Targeted therapy options are currently lacking for the heterogeneous population of patients whose melanomas lack BRAF or NRAS mutations (~35% of cases). We undertook a chemical biology screen to identify potential novel drug targets for this understudied group of tumors. Screening a panel of 8 BRAF/NRAS-WT melanoma cell lines against 240 targeted drugs identified ceritinib and trametinib as potential hits with single-agent activity. Ceritinib enhanced the efficacy of trametinib across the majority of the BRAF/NRAS-WT cell lines, and the combination showed increased cytotoxicity in both three-dimensional spheroid culture and long-term colony formation experiments. Coadministration of ceritinib and trametinib led to robust inhibition of tumor growth in an in vivo xenograft BRAF/NRAS-WT melanoma model; this was not due to ALK inhibition by ceritinib. Mechanistic studies showed the ceritinib–trametinib combination to increase suppression of MAPK and TORC1 signaling. Similar results were seen when BRAF/NRAS-WT melanoma cells were treated with a combination of trametinib and the TORC1/2 inhibitor INK128. We next used mass spectrometry–based chemical proteomics and identified known and new ceritinib targets, such as IGF1R and ACK1, respectively. Validation studies suggested that ceritinib could suppress mTORC1 signaling in the presence of trametinib through inhibition of IGF1R and/or ACK1 in a cell line–dependent manner. Together, our studies demonstrated that combining a specific inhibitor (trametinib) with a more broadly targeted agent (ceritinib) has efficacy against tumors with heterogeneous mutational profiles. Mol Cancer Ther; 17(1); 73–83. ©2017 AACR.
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