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Efficacy of a Non-Hypercalcemic Vitamin-D2 Derived Anti-Cancer Agent (MT19c) and Inhibition of Fatty Acid Synthesis in an Ovarian Cancer Xenograft Model

BACKGROUND: Numerous vitamin-D analogs exhibited poor response rates, high systemic toxicities and hypercalcemia in human trials to treat cancer. We identified the first non-hypercalcemic anti-cancer vitamin D analog MT19c by altering the A-ring of ergocalciferol. This study describes the therapeuti...

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Autores principales: Moore, Richard G., Lange, Thilo S., Robinson, Katina, Kim, Kyu K., Uzun, Alper, Horan, Timothy C., Kawar, Nada, Yano, Naohiro, Chu, Sharon R., Mao, Quanfu, Brard, Laurent, DePaepe, Monique E., Padbury, James F., Arnold, Leggy A., Brodsky, Alexander, Shen, Tun-Li, Singh, Rakesh K.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3317945/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22509304
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0034443
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author Moore, Richard G.
Lange, Thilo S.
Robinson, Katina
Kim, Kyu K.
Uzun, Alper
Horan, Timothy C.
Kawar, Nada
Yano, Naohiro
Chu, Sharon R.
Mao, Quanfu
Brard, Laurent
DePaepe, Monique E.
Padbury, James F.
Arnold, Leggy A.
Brodsky, Alexander
Shen, Tun-Li
Singh, Rakesh K.
author_facet Moore, Richard G.
Lange, Thilo S.
Robinson, Katina
Kim, Kyu K.
Uzun, Alper
Horan, Timothy C.
Kawar, Nada
Yano, Naohiro
Chu, Sharon R.
Mao, Quanfu
Brard, Laurent
DePaepe, Monique E.
Padbury, James F.
Arnold, Leggy A.
Brodsky, Alexander
Shen, Tun-Li
Singh, Rakesh K.
author_sort Moore, Richard G.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Numerous vitamin-D analogs exhibited poor response rates, high systemic toxicities and hypercalcemia in human trials to treat cancer. We identified the first non-hypercalcemic anti-cancer vitamin D analog MT19c by altering the A-ring of ergocalciferol. This study describes the therapeutic efficacy and mechanism of action of MT19c in both in vitro and in vivo models. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDING: Antitumor efficacy of MT19c was evaluated in ovarian cancer cell (SKOV-3) xenografts in nude mice and a syngenic rat ovarian cancer model. Serum calcium levels of MT19c or calcitriol treated animals were measured. In-silico molecular docking simulation and a cell based VDR reporter assay revealed MT19c–VDR interaction. Genomewide mRNA analysis of MT19c treated tumors identified drug targets which were verified by immunoblotting and microscopy. Quantification of cellular malonyl CoA was carried out by HPLC-MS. A binding study with PPAR-Y receptor was performed. MT19c reduced ovarian cancer growth in xenograft and syngeneic animal models without causing hypercalcemia or acute toxicity. MT19c is a weak vitamin-D receptor (VDR) antagonist that disrupted the interaction between VDR and coactivator SRC2-3. Genome-wide mRNA analysis and western blot and microscopy of MT19c treated xenograft tumors showed inhibition of fatty acid synthase (FASN) activity. MT19c reduced cellular levels of malonyl CoA in SKOV-3 cells and inhibited EGFR/phosphoinositol-3kinase (PI-3K) activity independently of PPAR-gamma protein. SIGNIFICANCE: Antitumor effects of non-hypercalcemic agent MT19c provide a new approach to the design of vitamin-D based anticancer molecules and a rationale for developing MT19c as a therapeutic agent for malignant ovarian tumors by targeting oncogenic de novo lipogenesis.
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spelling pubmed-33179452012-04-16 Efficacy of a Non-Hypercalcemic Vitamin-D2 Derived Anti-Cancer Agent (MT19c) and Inhibition of Fatty Acid Synthesis in an Ovarian Cancer Xenograft Model Moore, Richard G. Lange, Thilo S. Robinson, Katina Kim, Kyu K. Uzun, Alper Horan, Timothy C. Kawar, Nada Yano, Naohiro Chu, Sharon R. Mao, Quanfu Brard, Laurent DePaepe, Monique E. Padbury, James F. Arnold, Leggy A. Brodsky, Alexander Shen, Tun-Li Singh, Rakesh K. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Numerous vitamin-D analogs exhibited poor response rates, high systemic toxicities and hypercalcemia in human trials to treat cancer. We identified the first non-hypercalcemic anti-cancer vitamin D analog MT19c by altering the A-ring of ergocalciferol. This study describes the therapeutic efficacy and mechanism of action of MT19c in both in vitro and in vivo models. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDING: Antitumor efficacy of MT19c was evaluated in ovarian cancer cell (SKOV-3) xenografts in nude mice and a syngenic rat ovarian cancer model. Serum calcium levels of MT19c or calcitriol treated animals were measured. In-silico molecular docking simulation and a cell based VDR reporter assay revealed MT19c–VDR interaction. Genomewide mRNA analysis of MT19c treated tumors identified drug targets which were verified by immunoblotting and microscopy. Quantification of cellular malonyl CoA was carried out by HPLC-MS. A binding study with PPAR-Y receptor was performed. MT19c reduced ovarian cancer growth in xenograft and syngeneic animal models without causing hypercalcemia or acute toxicity. MT19c is a weak vitamin-D receptor (VDR) antagonist that disrupted the interaction between VDR and coactivator SRC2-3. Genome-wide mRNA analysis and western blot and microscopy of MT19c treated xenograft tumors showed inhibition of fatty acid synthase (FASN) activity. MT19c reduced cellular levels of malonyl CoA in SKOV-3 cells and inhibited EGFR/phosphoinositol-3kinase (PI-3K) activity independently of PPAR-gamma protein. SIGNIFICANCE: Antitumor effects of non-hypercalcemic agent MT19c provide a new approach to the design of vitamin-D based anticancer molecules and a rationale for developing MT19c as a therapeutic agent for malignant ovarian tumors by targeting oncogenic de novo lipogenesis. Public Library of Science 2012-04-03 /pmc/articles/PMC3317945/ /pubmed/22509304 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0034443 Text en Moore 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
Moore, Richard G.
Lange, Thilo S.
Robinson, Katina
Kim, Kyu K.
Uzun, Alper
Horan, Timothy C.
Kawar, Nada
Yano, Naohiro
Chu, Sharon R.
Mao, Quanfu
Brard, Laurent
DePaepe, Monique E.
Padbury, James F.
Arnold, Leggy A.
Brodsky, Alexander
Shen, Tun-Li
Singh, Rakesh K.
Efficacy of a Non-Hypercalcemic Vitamin-D2 Derived Anti-Cancer Agent (MT19c) and Inhibition of Fatty Acid Synthesis in an Ovarian Cancer Xenograft Model
title Efficacy of a Non-Hypercalcemic Vitamin-D2 Derived Anti-Cancer Agent (MT19c) and Inhibition of Fatty Acid Synthesis in an Ovarian Cancer Xenograft Model
title_full Efficacy of a Non-Hypercalcemic Vitamin-D2 Derived Anti-Cancer Agent (MT19c) and Inhibition of Fatty Acid Synthesis in an Ovarian Cancer Xenograft Model
title_fullStr Efficacy of a Non-Hypercalcemic Vitamin-D2 Derived Anti-Cancer Agent (MT19c) and Inhibition of Fatty Acid Synthesis in an Ovarian Cancer Xenograft Model
title_full_unstemmed Efficacy of a Non-Hypercalcemic Vitamin-D2 Derived Anti-Cancer Agent (MT19c) and Inhibition of Fatty Acid Synthesis in an Ovarian Cancer Xenograft Model
title_short Efficacy of a Non-Hypercalcemic Vitamin-D2 Derived Anti-Cancer Agent (MT19c) and Inhibition of Fatty Acid Synthesis in an Ovarian Cancer Xenograft Model
title_sort efficacy of a non-hypercalcemic vitamin-d2 derived anti-cancer agent (mt19c) and inhibition of fatty acid synthesis in an ovarian cancer xenograft model
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3317945/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22509304
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0034443
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