Department of Therapeutic Radiology, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut.
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut.
Clin Cancer Res. 2019 Jan 15;25(2):784-795. doi: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-18-0792. Epub 2018 Jul 2.
Parallel signaling reduces the effects of receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK)-targeted therapies in glioma. We hypothesized that inhibition of protein N-linked glycosylation, an endoplasmic reticulum co- and posttranslational modification crucial for RTK maturation and activation, could provide a new therapeutic approach for glioma radiosensitization. We investigated the effects of a small-molecule inhibitor of the oligosaccharyltransferase (NGI-1) on EGFR family receptors, MET, PDGFR, and FGFR1. The influence of glycosylation state on tumor cell radiosensitivity, chemotherapy-induced cell toxicity, DNA damage, and cell-cycle arrest were determined and correlated with glioma cell receptor expression profiles. The effects of NGI-1 on xenograft tumor growth were tested using a nanoparticle formulation validated by molecular imaging. A mechanistic role for RTK signaling was evaluated through the expression of a glycosylation-independent CD8-EGFR chimera.
NGI-1 reduced glycosylation, protein levels, and activation of most RTKs. NGI-1 also enhanced the radiosensitivity and cytotoxic effects of chemotherapy in those glioma cells with elevated ErbB family activation, but not in cells without high levels of RTK activation. NGI-1 radiosensitization was associated with increases in both DNA damage and G cell-cycle arrest. Combined treatment of glioma xenografts with fractionated radiotherapy and NGI-1 significantly reduced tumor growth compared with controls. Expression of the CD8-EGFR eliminated the effects of NGI-1 on G arrest, DNA damage, and cellular radiosensitivity, identifying RTK inhibition as the principal mechanism for the NGI-1 effect.
This study suggests that oligosaccharyltransferase inhibition with NGI-1 is a novel approach to radiosensitize malignant gliomas with enhanced RTK signaling..
平行信号会降低受体酪氨酸激酶(RTK)靶向疗法在神经胶质瘤中的疗效。我们假设抑制蛋白质 N 连接糖基化,一种内质网共翻译和翻译后修饰,对 RTK 成熟和激活至关重要,可能为神经胶质瘤放射增敏提供新的治疗方法。我们研究了一种小分子寡糖基转移酶(NGI-1)抑制剂对 EGFR 家族受体、MET、PDGFR 和 FGFR1 的影响。测定了糖基化状态对肿瘤细胞放射敏感性、化疗诱导的细胞毒性、DNA 损伤和细胞周期停滞的影响,并与神经胶质瘤细胞受体表达谱相关联。使用经分子成像验证的纳米颗粒制剂测试了 NGI-1 对异种移植肿瘤生长的影响。通过表达一种不依赖糖基化的 CD8-EGFR 嵌合体,评估了 RTK 信号的作用机制。
NGI-1 降低了大多数 RTK 的糖基化、蛋白水平和激活。NGI-1 还增强了那些具有高 ErbB 家族激活的神经胶质瘤细胞的放射敏感性和化疗细胞毒性作用,但对没有高水平 RTK 激活的细胞则没有。NGI-1 放射增敏与 DNA 损伤和 G 期细胞周期停滞的增加有关。与对照组相比,用分割放射治疗和 NGI-1 联合治疗神经胶质瘤异种移植显著降低了肿瘤生长。CD8-EGFR 的表达消除了 NGI-1 对 G 期阻滞、DNA 损伤和细胞放射敏感性的影响,表明 RTK 抑制是 NGI-1 作用的主要机制。
本研究表明,用 NGI-1 抑制寡糖基转移酶是一种放射增敏增强 RTK 信号的神经胶质瘤的新方法。