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Ion channel expression in human melanoma samples. in silico identification and experimental validation of molecular targets

Title: Ion channel expression in human melanoma samples. in silico identification and experimental validation of molecular targets
Authors: Daniela D’Arcangelo; Francesca Scatozza; Claudia Giampietri; Paolo Marchetti; Francesco Facchiano; Antonio Facchiano
Contributors: D’Arcangelo, Daniela; Scatozza, Francesca; Giampietri, Claudia; Marchetti, Paolo; Facchiano, Francesco; Facchiano, Antonio
Publication Year: 2019
Collection: Sapienza Università di Roma: CINECA IRIS
Subject Terms: KCNN2; ion channel; melanoma; miconazole
Description: Expression of 328 ion channel genes was investigated, by in silico analysis, in 170 human melanoma samples and controls. Ninety-one members of this gene-family (i.e., about 28%) show a significant (p < 0.05) differential expression in melanoma- vs. nevi-biopsies, taken from the GEO database. ROC (receiver operating characteristic) analysis selected 20 genes as potential markers showing the highest discrimination ability of melanoma vs. nevi (AUC > 0.90 and p < 0.0001). These 20 genes underwent a first in silico-validation round in an independent patients-dataset from GEO. A second-in silico-validation step was then carried out on a third human dataset in Oncomine. Finally, five genes were validated, showing extremely high sensitivity and specificity in melanoma detection (>90% in most cases). Such five genes (namely, SCNN1A, GJB3, KCNK7, GJB1, KCNN2) are novel potential melanoma markers or molecular targets, never previously related to melanoma. The “druggable genome” analysis was then carried out. Miconazole, an antifungal drug commonly used in clinics, is known to target KCNN2, the best candidate among the five identified genes. Miconazole was then tested in vitro in proliferation assays; it dose-dependently inhibited proliferation up to 90% and potently induced cell-death in A-375 and SKMEL-28 melanoma cells, while it showed no effect in control cells. Moreover, specific silencing of KCNN2 ion channel was achieved by siRNA transfection; under such condition miconazole strongly increases its anti-proliferative effect. In conclusion, the present study identified five ion channels that can potentially serve as sensitive and specific markers in human melanoma specimens and demonstrates that the antifungal drug miconazole, known to target one of the five identified ion channels, exerts strong and specific anti-melanoma effects in vitro.
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
Language: English
Relation: info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/pmid/30934896; info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/wos/WOS:000467773400014; volume:11; issue:4; numberofpages:22; journal:CANCERS; http://hdl.handle.net/11573/1259498
DOI: 10.3390/cancers11040446
Availability: http://hdl.handle.net/11573/1259498; https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers11040446
Rights: info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Accession Number: edsbas.E2BC3976
Database: BASE