Background/Aim: The FOXC2 transcription factor promotes the progression of several cancer types, but has not been investigated in the context of melanoma cells. To study FOXC2's influence on melanoma progression, we generated a FOXC2-deficient murine melanoma cell line and evaluated The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) patient datasets. Materials and Methods: We compared tumor growth kinetics and RNA-seq/qRT-PCR gene expression profiles from wild-type versus FOXC2-deficient murine melanomas. We also performed Kaplan-Meier survival analysis of TCGA data to assess the influence of FOXC2 gene expression on melanoma patients' response to chemotherapy and immunotherapy. Results: FOXC2 promotes melanoma progression and regulates the expression of genes associated with multiple oncogenic pathways, including the oxidative stress response, xenobiotic metabolism, and interferon responsiveness. FOXC2 expression in melanoma correlates negatively with patient response to chemotherapy and immunotherapy. Conclusion: FOXC2 drives a tumor-promoting gene expression program in melanoma and is a prognostic indicator of patient response to multiple cancer therapies. Melanoma, a highly aggressive form of cancer arising from pigment-producing melanocytes, is responsible for the majority of skin cancer-related mortality, accounting for~6 0,000 annual deaths worldwide (1). Importantly, the incidence of melanoma has risen substantially over the last 40 years (2), a trend that is expected to continue to at least 2031 (3). Although surgical removal of primary lesions is typically successful in the treatment of early-stage disease, many melanoma patients are not diagnosed until later stages of metastatic disease in which surgery is either not possible or largely ineffective. Unfortunately, malignant melanoma is highly resistant to radiation and chemotherapy, and the only FDA-approved chemotherapeutic for the treatment of melanoma, dacarbazine (DTIC), has a minimal impact on patient survival (4). While advances in targeted therapy and immunotherapy have improved the prognosis for melanoma in recent years, there are still patients who do not respond to these regimens, and relapse of therapy-resistant tumors remains an ongoing challenge in many patients who do achieve clinical benefit (5, 6). Therefore, in order to improve the clinical outcome of melanoma patients going forward, it is necessary to gain additional insight into factors that promote melanoma progression and resistance to these therapeutic modalities. FOXC2 is a member of the forkhead box family of transcription factors that control a variety of cellular processes in embryonic and adult tissues. In addition to its normal regulation of development, growth, and metabolism in various tissue types, FOXC2 has recently emerged as a driver of several hallmarks of cancer progression as well. Within vascular endothelial cells, FOXC2 promotes expression of multiple genes that enhance angiogenesis (7-9). FOXC2 can also become overexpressed or dysregulated in tumor cells themselves, where it is asso...