Zhang Ying, Cruickshanks Nichola, Yuan Fang, Wang Baomin, Pahuski Mary, Wulfkuhle Julia, Gallagher Isela, Koeppel Alexander F, Hatef Sarah, Papanicolas Christopher, Lee Jeongwu, Bar Eli E, Schiff David, Turner Stephen D, Petricoin Emanuel F, Gray Lloyd S, Abounader Roger
Department of Microbiology, Immunology & Cancer Biology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia.
George Mason University Center for Applied Proteomics and Molecular Medicine, Manassas, Virginia.
Cancer Res. 2017 Jul 1;77(13):3479-3490. doi: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-16-2347. Epub 2017 May 16.
Glioblastoma (GBM) stem-like cells (GSC) promote tumor initiation, progression, and therapeutic resistance. Here, we show how GSCs can be targeted by the FDA-approved drug mibefradil, which inhibits the T-type calcium channel Cav3.2. This calcium channel was highly expressed in human GBM specimens and enriched in GSCs. Analyses of the The Cancer Genome Atlas and REMBRANDT databases confirmed upregulation of Cav3.2 in a subset of tumors and showed that overexpression associated with worse prognosis. Mibefradil treatment or RNAi-mediated attenuation of Cav3.2 was sufficient to inhibit the growth, survival, and stemness of GSCs and also sensitized them to temozolomide chemotherapy. Proteomic and transcriptomic analyses revealed that Cav3.2 inhibition altered cancer signaling pathways and gene transcription. Cav3.2 inhibition suppressed GSC growth in part by inhibiting prosurvival AKT/mTOR pathways and stimulating proapoptotic survivin and BAX pathways. Furthermore, Cav3.2 inhibition decreased expression of oncogenes (PDGFA, PDGFB, and TGFB1) and increased expression of tumor suppressor genes (TNFRSF14 and HSD17B14). Oral administration of mibefradil inhibited growth of GSC-derived GBM murine xenografts, prolonged host survival, and sensitized tumors to temozolomide treatment. Our results offer a comprehensive characterization of Cav3.2 in GBM tumors and GSCs and provide a preclinical proof of concept for repurposing mibefradil as a mechanism-based treatment strategy for GBM. .
胶质母细胞瘤(GBM)干细胞(GSC)促进肿瘤起始、进展和治疗抗性。在此,我们展示了美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)批准的药物米贝拉地尔如何靶向GSC,该药物抑制T型钙通道Cav3.2。这种钙通道在人类GBM标本中高度表达且在GSC中富集。对癌症基因组图谱(The Cancer Genome Atlas)和REMBRANDT数据库的分析证实了Cav3.2在一部分肿瘤中的上调,并表明其过表达与更差的预后相关。米贝拉地尔治疗或RNA干扰介导的Cav3.2衰减足以抑制GSC的生长、存活和干性,还使它们对替莫唑胺化疗敏感。蛋白质组学和转录组学分析表明,Cav3.2抑制改变了癌症信号通路和基因转录。Cav3.2抑制部分通过抑制促存活的AKT/mTOR通路并刺激促凋亡的生存素和BAX通路来抑制GSC生长。此外,Cav3.2抑制降低了癌基因(PDGFA、PDGFB和TGFB1)的表达并增加了肿瘤抑制基因(TNFRSF14和HSD17B14)的表达。口服米贝拉地尔抑制了GSC来源的GBM小鼠异种移植瘤的生长,延长了宿主存活时间,并使肿瘤对替莫唑胺治疗敏感。我们的结果全面表征了GBM肿瘤和GSC中的Cav3.2,并为将米贝拉地尔重新用作GBM基于机制的治疗策略提供了临床前概念验证。