A mutual information-based in vivo monitoring of adaptive response to targeted therapies in melanoma
Aurore Bugi-Marteyn, Fanny Noulet, Nicolas Liaudet, Rastine Merat

TL;DR
This study develops a single-cell in vivo method using mutual information to monitor adaptive resistance mechanisms in melanoma during targeted BRAF therapy, aiming to improve understanding and prediction of treatment response.
Contribution
It introduces a mutual information-based approach for in vivo, single-cell level analysis of dependencies between resistance pathways in melanoma, validated through immunohistochemistry in xenograft models.
Findings
Mutual information effectively captures dependencies between resistance markers.
HuR and resistance effectors show transient, time-shifted dependencies.
The method outperforms traditional correlation measures.
Abstract
The mechanisms of adaptive resistance to genetic-based targeted therapies of solid malignancies have been the subject of intense research. These studies hold great promise for finding co-targetable hub/pathways which in turn would control the downstream non-genetic mechanisms of adaptive resistance. Many such mechanisms have been described in the paradigmatic BRAF-mutated melanoma model of adaptive response to BRAF inhibition. Currently, a major challenge for these mechanistic studies is to confirm in vivo, at the single-cell proteomic level, the existence of dependencies between the co-targeted hub/pathways and their downstream effectors. Moreover, the drug-induced in vivo modulation of these dependencies needs to be demonstrated. Here, we implement such single-cell-based in vivo expression dependency quantification using immunohistochemistry (IHC)-based analyses of sequential biopsies…
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