Farina Hernán G, Bublik Débora R, Alonso Daniel F, Gomez Daniel E
Laboratory of Molecular Oncology, Quilmes National University, Bernal, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Clin Exp Metastasis. 2002;19(6):551-9. doi: 10.1023/a:1020355621043.
Lovastatin is a competitive inhibitor of 3-hydroxy 3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase, the key regulatory enzyme of cholesterol biosynthesis. This enzyme catalyzes the formation of mevalonate, which is also the precursor of isoprenoid moieties, such as farnesol and geraniol, that are incorporated into several molecules essential for tumor cell signaling. Here, we describe that pretreatment with a non-cytotoxic concentration of lovastatin (10 microM) dramatically inhibited the metastatic ability of F311 mammary carcinoma cells in syngeneic BALB/c mice. Similarly, daily i.p. treatment of animals with a well-tolerated dose of lovastatin (10 mg/kg/day) significantly reduced the number of experimental lung metastases. In vitro, incubation of F3II monolayers in the presence of lovastatin caused a rounded-cell morphology. Immunofluorescence analysis revealed a lack of cortical actin organization, micrutubule disruption and inhibition of integrin-mediated focal contacts in lovastatin-treated cells. Exposure of F3II cells to lovastatin significantly inhibited tumor cell adhesion and migration, and coincubation with the cholesterol precursor mevalonate prevented these effects. Lovastatin reduced membrane localization of Rho protein, a signaling molecule involved in the regulation of actin-based cell motility that needs geranylation for membrane association and activation. In addition, lovastatin induced a dose-dependent inhibition in the secretion of urokinase, a key proteolytic enzyme during tumor invasion and metastasis, and a significant increase of tissue-type plasminogen activator, a marker of good prognosis in mammary cancer. These data suggest that antimetastatic properties of lovastatin are strongly associated with alterations in cytoskeleton organization and the consequent modulation of adhesion, motility and proteolysis.
洛伐他汀是3-羟基-3-甲基戊二酰辅酶A还原酶的竞争性抑制剂,该酶是胆固醇生物合成的关键调节酶。此酶催化甲羟戊酸的形成,甲羟戊酸也是类异戊二烯部分(如法尼醇和香叶醇)的前体,这些类异戊二烯部分会掺入对肿瘤细胞信号传导至关重要的几种分子中。在此,我们描述了用非细胞毒性浓度的洛伐他汀(10微摩尔)预处理可显著抑制同基因BALB/c小鼠中F311乳腺癌细胞的转移能力。同样,每日腹腔注射给予动物耐受良好剂量的洛伐他汀(10毫克/千克/天)可显著减少实验性肺转移灶的数量。在体外,在洛伐他汀存在的情况下培养F3II单层细胞会导致细胞呈圆形形态。免疫荧光分析显示,在经洛伐他汀处理的细胞中,皮质肌动蛋白组织缺失、微管破坏以及整合素介导的粘着斑受到抑制。将F3II细胞暴露于洛伐他汀可显著抑制肿瘤细胞的粘附和迁移,与胆固醇前体甲羟戊酸共同孵育可阻止这些效应。洛伐他汀减少了Rho蛋白的膜定位,Rho蛋白是一种参与基于肌动蛋白的细胞运动调节的信号分子,其膜结合和激活需要香叶酰化。此外,洛伐他汀对尿激酶的分泌产生剂量依赖性抑制,尿激酶是肿瘤侵袭和转移过程中的一种关键蛋白水解酶,同时组织型纤溶酶原激活剂显著增加,组织型纤溶酶原激活剂是乳腺癌预后良好的一个标志物。这些数据表明,洛伐他汀的抗转移特性与细胞骨架组织的改变以及随之而来的对粘附、运动和蛋白水解的调节密切相关。