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Cancer Cell Line Encyclopedia Data Suggest that Ligands for ERBB Family Receptors May Drive BRAF-WT Melanomas

Wilson, E.; Conway, A.; Riese, D. J.

2026-03-18 cancer biology
10.64898/2026.03.16.712185 bioRxiv
Show abstract

I.Cutaneous skin melanomas with wild-type BRAF alleles ("BRAF-WT melanomas") remain relatively difficult to treat, even though they typically possess driver mutations in a RAS gene or NF1. For example, these tumors respond relatively poorly to combinations of MEK and BRAF inhibitors, and their response to ICIs is muted compared to the response of BRAF-mutant melanomas. ERBB2 and ERBB4, which encode receptor tyrosine kinase genes, are necessary and sufficient for the proliferation of multiple BRAF-WT melanoma cell lines. Consequently, we have postulated that ERBB4-ERBB2 heterodimerization drives BRAF-WT melanomas. This mechanism is consistent with the observation that elevated ERBB4 transcription or ERBB4 mutations are found in a significant fraction of BRAF-WT melanoma tumor samples. Moreover, a subset of ERBB4 mutations found in BRAF-WT melanoma samples increases proliferation in a BRAF-WT melanoma cell line. Because the elevated ERBB4 transcription observed in BRAF- WT melanomas is typically insufficient to cause ligand-independent ERBB4 signaling, we have postulated that ligands for ERBB family receptors drive the elevated ERBB4-ERBB2 heterodimerization responsible for the proliferation of BRAF-WT melanoma cell lines. We have explored this hypothesis by analyzing data found in the Broad Institutes Cancer Cell Line Encyclopedia. These data suggest that some EGF family hormones are required for the proliferation of BRAF-WT melanoma cell lines. Likewise, the G11/Gq pathway, which can stimulate cleavage and maturation of EGF family hormones, is also required for the proliferation of BRAF-WT melanoma cell lines. Thus, these data suggest additional therapeutic targets in BRAF-WT melanomas. Moreover, because many uveal (ocular) melanomas possess elevated G11/Gq signaling, these data suggest that ligand stimulation of ERBB receptor signaling may contribute to uveal melanomagenesis or progression.

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