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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Bortezomib drug slows growth of canine malignant melanoma cells

By Ito, Keita et al.·Published in Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)·2013·Department of Veterinary Clinical Pathology, Japan·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: The proteasome inhibitor bortezomib inhibits the growth of canine malignant melanoma cells in vitro and in vivo.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A study found that a drug called bortezomib can slow the growth of aggressive skin tumors known as malignant melanomas in dogs. Researchers tested this drug on various melanoma cell lines and found it effectively inhibited their growth. In a mouse model mimicking canine melanoma, bortezomib significantly reduced tumor size by targeting specific cancer pathways. This suggests that bortezomib could be a promising treatment option for dogs diagnosed with malignant melanoma, potentially improving their prognosis.

People also search for: dog melanoma treatment · bortezomib for dogs · canine skin cancer therapy

Abstract

Canine malignant melanomas are highly aggressive and fatal neoplasms. In the present report, 21 drugs that target specific signalling pathways were screened for their growth inhibitory activity on three canine malignant melanoma cell lines. The proteasome inhibitor bortezomib inhibited the growth of these cell lines. The growth inhibitory properties of bortezomib were then examined using nine canine malignant melanoma cell lines. Bortezomib demonstrated potent growth inhibitory activity in all cell lines with calculated IC50 values of 3.5-5.6 nM. Because suppression of the NF-κB pathway by preventing proteasomic degradation of I κB is an important mechanism of the anti-tumour activity of bortezomib, the activation status of and the effect of bortezomib on the NF-κB pathway were examined using a canine malignant melanoma cell line, CMM-1. The NF-κB pathway was constitutively activated in CMM-1 cells and bortezomib efficiently suppressed this activated pathway. Using a CMM-1 xenograft mouse model, bortezomib also significantly inhibited tumour growth via suppression of tumour cell proliferation. Collectively, these findings suggest that bortezomib has growth inhibitory activity against canine malignant melanomas potentially through suppression of the constitutively activated NF-κB pathway. Targeted therapy using bortezomib could therefore be beneficial in the management of canine malignant melanomas.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24035468/