Ogura Satoshi, Yoshida Yuichi, Kurahashi Tomohide, Egawa Mayumi, Furuta Kunimaro, Kiso Shinichi, Kamada Yoshihiro, Hikita Hayato, Eguchi Hidetoshi, Ogita Hisakazu, Doki Yuichiro, Mori Masaki, Tatsumi Tomohide, Takehara Tetsuo
Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Osaka University, Graduate School of Medicine, Suita, Osaka, Japan.
Department of Molecular Biochemistry and Clinical Investigation, Osaka University, Graduate School of Medicine, Suita, Osaka, Japan.
Oncotarget. 2018 Apr 20;9(30):21022-21035. doi: 10.18632/oncotarget.24781.
Dysregulation of cell metabolism is a hallmark of cancer. The mevalonate pathway in lipid metabolism has been implicated as a potential target of cancer therapy for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). The role of the Forkhead Box M1 (FoxM1) transcription factor in HCC development has been well documented, however, its involvement in cancer metabolism of HCC has not been fully determined. Here, we hypothesized that FoxM1 is involved in the mevalonate pathway of cholesterol biosynthesis in HCC. Inhibition of the mevalonate pathway by statins, inhibitors of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl CoA reductase (HMGCR), resulted in reduced expression of FoxM1 and increased cell death in human hepatoma cells. Re-exposure of mevalonate, a product of HMGCR, restored these effects. Likewise, knockdown of HMGCR reduced FoxM1 expression, indicating that FoxM1 expression was regulated by the mevalonate pathway in HCC. Mechanistically, protein geranylgeranylation was found to be responsible for FoxM1 expression and geranylgeranylated proteins, including RhoA, Rac1 or Cdc42, were shown to be involved in this process. In surgically resected human HCC tissues, the gene expression of had a positive correlation with that of the mevalonate pathway-related genes, such as or sterol regulatory element-binding protein 2 (). Furthermore, the gene expression of along with that of or defined prognosis of HCC patients, suggesting the clinical significance of the mevalonate-FoxM1 pathway in human HCC. Our data indicate that FoxM1 links the mevalonate pathway to oncogenic signals in HCC. Thus, we propose a novel therapeutic approach to inhibit FoxM1 by targeting the mevalonate pathway for HCC.
细胞代谢失调是癌症的一个标志。脂质代谢中的甲羟戊酸途径被认为是肝细胞癌(HCC)癌症治疗的潜在靶点。叉头框M1(FoxM1)转录因子在HCC发展中的作用已有充分记录,然而,其在HCC癌症代谢中的参与尚未完全确定。在这里,我们假设FoxM1参与HCC中胆固醇生物合成的甲羟戊酸途径。他汀类药物(3-羟基-3-甲基戊二酰辅酶A还原酶(HMGCR)抑制剂)对甲羟戊酸途径的抑制导致人肝癌细胞中FoxM1表达降低和细胞死亡增加。重新暴露于HMGCR的产物甲羟戊酸可恢复这些作用。同样,敲低HMGCR可降低FoxM1表达,表明HCC中甲羟戊酸途径调节FoxM1表达。机制上,发现蛋白质香叶基香叶基化负责FoxM1表达,并且包括RhoA、Rac1或Cdc42在内的香叶基香叶基化蛋白质参与了这一过程。在手术切除的人HCC组织中,[此处原文缺失相关基因名称]的基因表达与甲羟戊酸途径相关基因(如[此处原文缺失相关基因名称]或固醇调节元件结合蛋白2([此处原文缺失相关基因名称]))的基因表达呈正相关。此外,[此处原文缺失相关基因名称]的基因表达以及[此处原文缺失相关基因名称]或[此处原文缺失相关基因名称]的基因表达定义了HCC患者的预后,表明甲羟戊酸-FoxM1途径在人HCC中的临床意义。我们的数据表明FoxM1将甲羟戊酸途径与HCC中的致癌信号联系起来。因此,我们提出了一种通过靶向甲羟戊酸途径抑制FoxM1来治疗HCC的新方法。