Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee.
Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Mississippi, Oxford, Mississippi.
Mol Cancer Ther. 2020 Dec;19(12):2454-2464. doi: 10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-19-1106. Epub 2020 Oct 8.
Although new drug discoveries are revolutionizing cancer treatments, repurposing existing drugs would accelerate the timeline and lower the cost for bringing treatments to cancer patients. Our goal was to repurpose CPI211, a potent and selective antagonist of the thromboxane A-prostanoid receptor (TPr), a G-protein-coupled receptor that regulates coagulation, blood pressure, and cardiovascular homeostasis. To identify potential new clinical indications for CPI211, we performed a phenome-wide association study (PheWAS) of the gene encoding TPr, , using robust deidentified health records and matched genomic data from more than 29,000 patients. Specifically, PheWAS was used to identify clinical manifestations correlating with a single-nucleotide polymorphism (rs200445019), which generates a T399A substitution within TPr that enhances TPr signaling. Previous studies have correlated 200445019 with chronic venous hypertension, which was recapitulated by this PheWAS analysis. Unexpectedly, PheWAS uncovered an rs200445019 correlation with cancer metastasis across several cancer types. When tested in several mouse models of metastasis, TPr inhibition using CPI211 potently blocked spontaneous metastasis from primary tumors, without affecting tumor cell proliferation, motility, or tumor growth. Further, metastasis following intravenous tumor cell delivery was blocked in mice treated with CPI211. Interestingly, TPr signaling in vascular endothelial cells induced VE-cadherin internalization, diminished endothelial barrier function, and enhanced transendothelial migration by tumor cells, phenotypes that were decreased by CPI211. These studies provide evidence that TPr signaling promotes cancer metastasis, supporting the study of TPr inhibitors as antimetastatic agents and highlighting the use of PheWAS as an approach to accelerate drug repurposing.
尽管新的药物发现正在彻底改变癌症治疗方法,但重新利用现有的药物将加速为癌症患者带来治疗的时间并降低成本。我们的目标是重新利用 CPI211,这是一种血栓素 A-前列腺素受体(TPr)的有效且选择性拮抗剂,TPr 是一种调节凝血、血压和心血管稳态的 G 蛋白偶联受体。为了确定 CPI211 的潜在新临床适应症,我们使用来自 29000 多名患者的稳健匿名健康记录和匹配的基因组数据,对编码 TPr 的基因进行了全基因组关联研究(PheWAS)。具体来说,PheWAS 用于识别与单核苷酸多态性(rs200445019)相关的临床表现,该多态性在 TPr 内产生 T399A 取代,从而增强 TPr 信号。先前的研究表明,200445019 与慢性静脉高血压有关,本 PheWAS 分析对此进行了重现。出乎意料的是,PheWAS 揭示了 rs200445019 与多种癌症类型的癌症转移相关。在几种转移的小鼠模型中进行测试时,使用 CPI211 抑制 TPr 可有效阻止原发性肿瘤的自发性转移,而不影响肿瘤细胞增殖、迁移或肿瘤生长。此外,在用 CPI211 治疗的小鼠中,静脉内肿瘤细胞输送后转移被阻断。有趣的是,血管内皮细胞中的 TPr 信号诱导 VE-钙粘蛋白内化,降低内皮屏障功能,并增强肿瘤细胞的跨内皮迁移,这些表型被 CPI211 降低。这些研究提供了证据表明 TPr 信号促进癌症转移,支持将 TPr 抑制剂作为抗转移剂进行研究,并强调使用 PheWAS 作为加速药物重新利用的方法。