Targeting hyaluronic acid synthase-3 (HAS3) for the treatment of advanced renal cell carcinoma
-
Published:2022-12-29
Issue:1
Volume:22
Page:
-
ISSN:1475-2867
-
Container-title:Cancer Cell International
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Cancer Cell Int
Author:
Wang Jiaojiao,Jordan Andre R.,Zhu Huabin,Hasanali Sarrah L.,Thomas Eric,Lokeshwar Soum D.,Morera Daley S.,Alexander Sung,McDaniels Joseph,Sharma Anuj,Aguilar Karina,Sarcan Semih,Zhu Tianyi,Soloway Mark S.,Terris Martha K.,Thangaraju Muthusamy,Lopez Luis E.,Lokeshwar Vinata B.
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Hyaluronic acid (HA) promotes cancer metastasis; however, the currently approved treatments do not target HA. Metastatic renal carcinoma (mRCC) is an incurable disease. Sorafenib (SF) is a modestly effective antiangiogenic drug for mRCC. Although only endothelial cells express known SF targets, SF is cytotoxic to RCC cells at concentrations higher than the pharmacological-dose (5-µM). Using patient cohorts, mRCC models, and SF combination with 4-methylumbelliferone (MU), we discovered an SF target in RCC cells and targeted it for treatment.
Methods
We analyzed HA-synthase (HAS1, HAS2, HAS3) expression in RCC cells and clinical (n = 129), TCGA-KIRC (n = 542), and TCGA-KIRP (n = 291) cohorts. We evaluated the efficacy of SF and SF plus MU combination in RCC cells, HAS3-transfectants, endothelial-RCC co-cultures, and xenografts.
Results
RCC cells showed increased HAS3 expression. In the clinical and TCGA-KIRC/TCGA-KIRP cohorts, higher HAS3 levels predicted metastasis and shorter survival. At > 10-µM dose, SF inhibited HAS3/HA-synthesis and RCC cell growth. However, at ≤ 5-µM dose SF in combination with MU inhibited HAS3/HA synthesis, growth of RCC cells and endothelial-RCC co-cultures, and induced apoptosis. The combination inhibited motility/invasion and an HA-signaling-related invasive-signature. We previously showed that MU inhibits SF inactivation in RCC cells. While HAS3-knockdown transfectants were sensitive to SF, ectopic-HAS3-expression induced resistance to the combination. In RCC models, the combination inhibited tumor growth and metastasis with little toxicity; however, ectopic-HAS3-expressing tumors were resistant.
Conclusion
HAS3 is the first known target of SF in RCC cells. In combination with MU (human equivalent-dose, 0.6–1.1-g/day), SF targets HAS3 and effectively abrogates mRCC.
Funder
National Institutes of Health National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes of Health Biomedical Exchange Program, International Academy of Life Sciences
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Cancer Research,Genetics,Oncology
Reference55 articles.
1. Hsieh JJ, Purdue MP, Signoretti S, Swanton C, Albiges L, Schmidinger M, Heng DY, Larkin J, Ficarra V. Renal cell carcinoma. Nat Rev Dis Primers. 2017;3:17009. 2. Cimadamore A, Calio A, Marandino L, Marletta S, Franzese C, Schips L, Amparore D, Bertolo R, Muselaers S, Erdem S et al. Hot topics in renal cancer pathology: implications for clinical management. Expert Rev Anticancer Ther 2022;22:1275–1287 3. Escudier B, Porta C, Schmidinger M, Rioux-Leclercq N, Bex A, Khoo V, Grunwald V, Gillessen S, Horwich A. Renal cell carcinoma: ESMO clinical practice guidelines for diagnosis, treatment and follow-updagger. Ann Oncol. 2019;30:706–20. 4. Ljungberg B, Albiges L, Abu-Ghanem Y, Bensalah K, Dabestani S, Fernandez-Pello S, Giles RH, Hofmann F, Hora M, Kuczyk MA, et al. European association of urology guidelines on renal cell carcinoma: the 2019 update. Eur Urol. 2019;75:799–810. 5. Abu-Ghanem Y, Fernandez-Pello S, Bex A, Ljungberg B, Albiges L, Dabestani S, Giles RH, Hofmann F, Hora M, Kuczyk MA, et al. Limitations of available studies prevent reliable comparison between tumour ablation and partial nephrectomy for patients with localised renal masses: a systematic review from the European association of urology renal cell cancer guideline panel. Eur Urol Oncol. 2020;3:433–52.
Cited by
12 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|