The Hormel Institute, University of Minnesota, Austin, MN.
Masonic Cancer Center, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN.
Hepatology. 2019 Apr;69(4):1582-1598. doi: 10.1002/hep.30308. Epub 2019 Mar 15.
Cholangiocytes, the epithelial cells lining the biliary tree in the liver, express primary cilia that can detect several kinds of environmental signals and then transmit this information into the cell. We have reported that cilia are significantly reduced in cholangiocarcinoma (CCA) and that the experimental deciliation of normal cells induces a malignant-like phenotype with increased proliferation, anchorage-independent growth, invasion, and migration. Here, we tested the hypothesis that the chemosensory function of cholangiocyte primary cilia acts as a mechanism for tumor suppression. We found that in the presence of extracellular nucleotides cilia-dependent chemosensation of the nucleotides inhibited migration and invasion in normal ciliated cholangiocytes through a P2Y11 receptor and liver kinase B1 (LKB1)-phosphatase and tensin homolog-AKT-dependent mechanism. In contrast, in normal deciliated cholangiocytes and CCA cells, the nucleotides induced the opposite effects, i.e., increased migration and invasion. As activation of LKB1 through a cilia-dependent mechanism was required for the nucleotide-mediated inhibitory effects on migration and invasion, we attempted to activate LKB1 directly, independent of ciliary expression, using the compound hesperidin methyl chalcone (HMC). We found that HMC induced activation of LKB1 in both ciliated and deciliated cells in vitro, resulting in the inhibition of migration and proliferation. Furthermore, using a rat syngeneic orthotopic CCA model, we found that HMC inhibited tumor growth in vivo. Conclusion: These findings highlight the importance of the chemosensory function of primary cilia for the control of migration and invasion and suggest that, by directly activating LKB1 and bypassing the need for primary cilia, it is possible to emulate this chemosensory function in CCA cells; these data warrant further studies evaluating the possibility of using HMC as therapy for CCA.
胆管细胞是肝脏胆管树的上皮细胞,表达初级纤毛,能够检测到几种环境信号,然后将这些信息传递到细胞内。我们已经报道过,胆管癌细胞中纤毛明显减少,而正常细胞的纤毛实验去除会诱导类似恶性的表型,表现为增殖增加、锚定非依赖性生长、侵袭和迁移。在这里,我们检验了这样一个假设,即胆管细胞初级纤毛的化学感觉功能充当肿瘤抑制的机制。我们发现,在细胞外核苷酸存在的情况下,纤毛依赖的核苷酸化学感觉通过 P2Y11 受体和肝激酶 B1(LKB1)-磷酸酶和张力蛋白同系物-AKT 依赖性机制抑制正常有纤毛的胆管细胞的迁移和侵袭。相比之下,在正常去纤毛的胆管细胞和 CCA 细胞中,核苷酸会引起相反的效果,即增加迁移和侵袭。由于通过纤毛依赖的机制激活 LKB1 是核苷酸介导的对迁移和侵袭的抑制作用所必需的,我们试图通过使用化合物橙皮苷甲基查尔酮(HMC)直接激活 LKB1,而不依赖纤毛表达。我们发现,HMC 在体外的有纤毛和去纤毛细胞中均诱导 LKB1 的激活,导致迁移和增殖的抑制。此外,使用大鼠同源原位 CCA 模型,我们发现 HMC 在体内抑制肿瘤生长。结论:这些发现强调了初级纤毛的化学感觉功能对控制迁移和侵袭的重要性,并表明通过直接激活 LKB1 并绕过对初级纤毛的需求,有可能在 CCA 细胞中模拟这种化学感觉功能;这些数据需要进一步研究评估使用 HMC 作为 CCA 治疗的可能性。