Center for Biologics Evaluation & Research, Food Drug Administration, Bethesda, Maryland, United States of America.
Molecular & Tumor Immunology, Robert W. Franz Cancer Research Center, Earle A. Chiles Research Institute, Providence Cancer Center, Portland, Oregon, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2019 May 23;14(5):e0217131. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0217131. eCollection 2019.
Pyruvate kinase M2 (PKM2) is an alternatively spliced variant, which mediates the conversion of glucose to lactate in cancer cells under normoxic conditions, known as the Warburg effect. Previously, we demonstrated that PKM2 is one of 97 genes that are overexpressed in non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cell lines. Herein, we demonstrate a novel role of subcellular PKM2 expression as a biomarker of therapeutic response after targeting this gene by shRNA or small molecule inhibitor (SMI) of PKM2 enzyme activity in vitro and in vivo. We examined two established lung cancer cell lines, nine patients derived NSCLC and three normal lung fibroblast cell lines for PKM2 mRNA, protein and enzyme activity by RT-qPCR, immunocytochemistry (ICC), and Western blot analysis. All eleven NSCLC cell lines showed upregulated PKM2 enzymatic activity and protein expression mainly in their cytoplasm. Targeting PKM2 by shRNA or SMI, NSCLC cells showed significantly reduced mRNA, enzyme activity, cell viability, and colony formation, which also downregulated cytosolic PKM2 and upregulated nuclear enzyme activities. Normal lung fibroblast cell lines did not express PKM2, which served as negative controls. PKM2 targeting by SMI slowed tumor growth while gene-silencing significantly reduced growth of human NSCLC xenografts. Tumor sections from responding mice showed >70% reduction in cytoplasmic PKM2 with low or undetectable nuclear staining by immunohistochemistry (IHC). In sharp contrast, non-responding tumors showed a >38% increase in PKM2 nuclear staining with low or undetectable cytoplasmic staining. In conclusion, these results confirmed PKM2 as a target for cancer therapy and an unique function of subcellular PKM2, which may characterize therapeutic response to anti-PKM2 therapy in NSCLC.
丙酮酸激酶 M2(PKM2)是一种剪接变体,在常氧条件下介导葡萄糖向乳酸的转化,这种现象被称为瓦博格效应。此前,我们已经证明 PKM2 是在非小细胞肺癌(NSCLC)细胞系中过表达的 97 个基因之一。在此,我们证明了亚细胞 PKM2 表达作为一种生物标志物的新作用,这种作用可以预测通过 shRNA 或 PKM2 酶活性小分子抑制剂(SMI)靶向该基因后的治疗反应。我们通过 RT-qPCR、免疫细胞化学(ICC)和 Western blot 分析,检查了两种已建立的肺癌细胞系、9 名患者来源的 NSCLC 和 3 种正常肺成纤维细胞系的 PKM2 mRNA、蛋白和酶活性。所有 11 种 NSCLC 细胞系均显示出 PKM2 酶活性和蛋白表达上调,主要在细胞质中。通过 shRNA 或 SMI 靶向 PKM2,NSCLC 细胞的 mRNA、酶活性、细胞活力和集落形成均显著降低,同时细胞质中的 PKM2 下调,核中的酶活性上调。正常肺成纤维细胞系不表达 PKM2,作为阴性对照。SMI 靶向 PKM2 可减缓肿瘤生长,而基因沉默则显著降低人 NSCLC 异种移植瘤的生长。对有反应的小鼠的肿瘤切片进行免疫组化(IHC)分析,结果显示细胞质 PKM2 减少了>70%,核染色则呈低水平或无法检测到。相比之下,无反应的肿瘤的 PKM2 核染色增加了>38%,细胞质染色则呈低水平或无法检测到。总之,这些结果证实 PKM2 是癌症治疗的靶点,也是亚细胞 PKM2 的独特功能,这可能是对 NSCLC 抗 PKM2 治疗的治疗反应的特征。