Ren Ling, Mendoza Arnulfo, Zhu Jack, Briggs Joseph W, Halsey Charles, Hong Ellen S, Burkett Sandra S, Morrow James, Lizardo Michael M, Osborne Tanasa, Li Samuel Q, Luu Hue H, Meltzer Paul, Khanna Chand
Molecular Oncology Section - Metastasis Biology Group, Pediatric Oncology Branch, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, Maryland, USA.
Genetic Branch, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, Maryland, USA.
Oncotarget. 2015 Oct 6;6(30):29469-81. doi: 10.18632/oncotarget.5177.
Osteosarcoma (OS) is the most common bone tumor in pediatric patients. Metastasis is a major cause of mortality and morbidity. The rarity of this disease coupled with the challenges of drug development for metastatic cancers have slowed the delivery of improvements in long-term outcomes for these patients. In this study, we collected 18 OS cell lines, confirmed their expression of bone markers and complex karyotypes, and characterized their in vivo tumorgenicity and metastatic potential. Since prior reports included conflicting descriptions of the metastatic and in vivo phenotypes of these models, there was a need for a comparative assessment of metastatic phenotypes using identical procedures in the hands of a single investigative group. We expect that this single characterization will accelerate the study of this metastatic cancer. Using these models we evaluated the expression of six previously reported metastasis-related OS genes. Ezrin was the only gene consistently differentially expressed in all the pairs of high/low metastatic OS cells. We then used a subtractive gene expression approach of the high and low human metastatic cells to identify novel genes that may be involved in OS metastasis. PHLDA1 (pleckstrin homology-like domain, family A) was identified as one of the genes more highly expressed in the high metastatic compared to low metastatic cells. Knocking down PHLDA1 with siRNA or shRNA resulted in down regulation of the activities of MAPKs (ERK1/2), c-Jun N-terminal kinases (JNK), and p38 mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs). Reducing the expression of PHLDA1 also delayed OS metastasis progression in mouse xenograft models.
骨肉瘤(OS)是儿科患者中最常见的骨肿瘤。转移是导致死亡和发病的主要原因。这种疾病的罕见性以及转移性癌症药物开发的挑战,减缓了这些患者长期预后改善的进程。在本研究中,我们收集了18种骨肉瘤细胞系,确认了它们骨标志物的表达和复杂的核型,并对它们的体内致瘤性和转移潜能进行了表征。由于先前的报告对这些模型的转移和体内表型描述相互矛盾,因此需要由单一研究团队使用相同程序对转移表型进行比较评估。我们期望这种单一表征将加速对这种转移性癌症的研究。利用这些模型,我们评估了六个先前报道的与骨肉瘤转移相关基因的表达。埃兹蛋白是在所有高/低转移性骨肉瘤细胞对中始终差异表达的唯一基因。然后,我们使用高、低转移性人骨肉瘤细胞的消减基因表达方法来鉴定可能参与骨肉瘤转移的新基因。PHLDA1(pleckstrin同源样结构域,A家族)被鉴定为在高转移性细胞中比低转移性细胞表达更高的基因之一。用小干扰RNA(siRNA)或短发夹RNA(shRNA)敲低PHLDA1会导致丝裂原活化蛋白激酶(MAPKs,细胞外信号调节激酶1/2(ERK1/2)、c-Jun氨基末端激酶(JNK)和p38丝裂原活化蛋白激酶)活性下调。降低PHLDA1的表达也会延缓小鼠异种移植模型中骨肉瘤转移的进程。