PTEN enhances the radiosensitivity of melanoma by inhibiting DNA-PKcs
Shengqian Zhu, Haitao Xu, Fu Shen, Fangying Chen, Yangjian Wang

TL;DR
This study shows that PTEN makes melanoma cells more sensitive to radiation by blocking DNA repair pathways, which could help improve radiotherapy for melanoma patients.
Contribution
The study reveals that PTEN enhances melanoma radiosensitivity by inhibiting DNA-PKcs and NHEJ repair mechanisms.
Findings
PTEN expression is lower in melanoma tissues and cell lines compared to normal controls.
PTEN overexpression increases radiosensitivity by inhibiting DNA-PKcs and reducing DNA repair.
PTEN knockdown activates p-ATM/p-Chk2 signaling and reduces apoptosis after radiation.
Abstract
The phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) is a classical tumor-suppressor gene. Its expression deficiency concurrently drives disease progression in approximately 30% of melanomas and is closely associated with radiotherapy tolerance. However, there is a lack of systematic evidence regarding whether and how PTEN regulates the radiosensitivity of melanoma. The expression of PTEN was validated using TCGA database, clinical tissue microarrays, and multiple melanoma cell lines. PTEN knockdown (PTEN-KD) and PTEN overexpression (PTEN-OE) stable cell lines were constructed using lentiviral vectors. CCK-8, colony formation assay, annexin V/PI flow cytometry, neutral comet assay, cell-cycle analysis, and Western blotting were used to assess the biological changes in cells after 0 Gy–8 Gy γ-ray irradiation (IR). A cell-derived xenograft model was established, and the tumor volume was observed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPI3K/AKT/mTOR signaling in cancer · Melanoma and MAPK Pathways · Cutaneous Melanoma Detection and Management
