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Inhibition of Mesothelin as a Novel Strategy for Targeting Cancer Cells

Mesothelin, a differentiation antigen present in a series of malignancies such as mesothelioma, ovarian, lung and pancreatic cancer, has been studied as a marker for diagnosis and a target for immunotherapy. We, however, were interested in evaluating the effects of direct targeting of Mesothelin on...

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Autores principales: Wang, Kun, Bodempudi, Vidya, Liu, Zhengian, Borrego-Diaz, Emma, Yamoutpoor, Farnaz, Meyer, Anna, Woo, Richard A., Pan, Weihong, Dudek, Arkadiusz Z., Olyaee, Mojtaba S., Esfandyari, Tuba, Farassati, Faris
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3317639/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22485139
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0033214
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author Wang, Kun
Bodempudi, Vidya
Liu, Zhengian
Borrego-Diaz, Emma
Yamoutpoor, Farnaz
Meyer, Anna
Woo, Richard A.
Pan, Weihong
Dudek, Arkadiusz Z.
Olyaee, Mojtaba S.
Esfandyari, Tuba
Farassati, Faris
author_facet Wang, Kun
Bodempudi, Vidya
Liu, Zhengian
Borrego-Diaz, Emma
Yamoutpoor, Farnaz
Meyer, Anna
Woo, Richard A.
Pan, Weihong
Dudek, Arkadiusz Z.
Olyaee, Mojtaba S.
Esfandyari, Tuba
Farassati, Faris
author_sort Wang, Kun
collection PubMed
description Mesothelin, a differentiation antigen present in a series of malignancies such as mesothelioma, ovarian, lung and pancreatic cancer, has been studied as a marker for diagnosis and a target for immunotherapy. We, however, were interested in evaluating the effects of direct targeting of Mesothelin on the viability of cancer cells as the first step towards developing a novel therapeutic strategy. We report here that gene specific silencing for Mesothelin by distinct methods (siRNA and microRNA) decreased viability of cancer cells from different origins such as mesothelioma (H2373), ovarian cancer (Skov3 and Ovcar-5) and pancreatic cancer (Miapaca2 and Panc-1). Additionally, the invasiveness of cancer cells was also significantly decreased upon such treatment. We then investigated pro-oncogenic signaling characteristics of cells upon mesothelin-silencing which revealed a significant decrease in phospho-ERK1 and PI3K/AKT activity. The molecular mechanism of reduced invasiveness was connected to the reduced expression of β-Catenin, an important marker of EMT (epithelial-mesenchymal transition). Ero1, a protein involved in clearing unfolded proteins and a member of the ER-Stress (endoplasmic reticulum-stress) pathway was also markedly reduced. Furthermore, Mesothelin silencing caused a significant increase in fraction of cancer cells in S-phase. In next step, treatment of ovarian cancer cells (OVca429) with a lentivirus expressing anti-mesothelin microRNA resulted in significant loss of viability, invasiveness, and morphological alterations. Therefore, we propose the inhibition of Mesothelin as a potential novel strategy for targeting human malignancies.
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spelling pubmed-33176392012-04-06 Inhibition of Mesothelin as a Novel Strategy for Targeting Cancer Cells Wang, Kun Bodempudi, Vidya Liu, Zhengian Borrego-Diaz, Emma Yamoutpoor, Farnaz Meyer, Anna Woo, Richard A. Pan, Weihong Dudek, Arkadiusz Z. Olyaee, Mojtaba S. Esfandyari, Tuba Farassati, Faris PLoS One Research Article Mesothelin, a differentiation antigen present in a series of malignancies such as mesothelioma, ovarian, lung and pancreatic cancer, has been studied as a marker for diagnosis and a target for immunotherapy. We, however, were interested in evaluating the effects of direct targeting of Mesothelin on the viability of cancer cells as the first step towards developing a novel therapeutic strategy. We report here that gene specific silencing for Mesothelin by distinct methods (siRNA and microRNA) decreased viability of cancer cells from different origins such as mesothelioma (H2373), ovarian cancer (Skov3 and Ovcar-5) and pancreatic cancer (Miapaca2 and Panc-1). Additionally, the invasiveness of cancer cells was also significantly decreased upon such treatment. We then investigated pro-oncogenic signaling characteristics of cells upon mesothelin-silencing which revealed a significant decrease in phospho-ERK1 and PI3K/AKT activity. The molecular mechanism of reduced invasiveness was connected to the reduced expression of β-Catenin, an important marker of EMT (epithelial-mesenchymal transition). Ero1, a protein involved in clearing unfolded proteins and a member of the ER-Stress (endoplasmic reticulum-stress) pathway was also markedly reduced. Furthermore, Mesothelin silencing caused a significant increase in fraction of cancer cells in S-phase. In next step, treatment of ovarian cancer cells (OVca429) with a lentivirus expressing anti-mesothelin microRNA resulted in significant loss of viability, invasiveness, and morphological alterations. Therefore, we propose the inhibition of Mesothelin as a potential novel strategy for targeting human malignancies. Public Library of Science 2012-04-02 /pmc/articles/PMC3317639/ /pubmed/22485139 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0033214 Text en Wang et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Wang, Kun
Bodempudi, Vidya
Liu, Zhengian
Borrego-Diaz, Emma
Yamoutpoor, Farnaz
Meyer, Anna
Woo, Richard A.
Pan, Weihong
Dudek, Arkadiusz Z.
Olyaee, Mojtaba S.
Esfandyari, Tuba
Farassati, Faris
Inhibition of Mesothelin as a Novel Strategy for Targeting Cancer Cells
title Inhibition of Mesothelin as a Novel Strategy for Targeting Cancer Cells
title_full Inhibition of Mesothelin as a Novel Strategy for Targeting Cancer Cells
title_fullStr Inhibition of Mesothelin as a Novel Strategy for Targeting Cancer Cells
title_full_unstemmed Inhibition of Mesothelin as a Novel Strategy for Targeting Cancer Cells
title_short Inhibition of Mesothelin as a Novel Strategy for Targeting Cancer Cells
title_sort inhibition of mesothelin as a novel strategy for targeting cancer cells
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3317639/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22485139
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0033214
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