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ACVR1C/SMAD2 signaling promotes invasion and growth in retinoblastoma

Retinoblastoma is the most common intraocular cancer in children. While the primary tumor can often be treated by local or systemic chemotherapy, metastatic dissemination is generally resistant to therapy and remains a leading cause of pediatric cancer death in much of the world. In order to identif...

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Autores principales: Asnaghi, Laura, White, David T., Key, Nolan, Choi, Joshua, Mahale, Alka, Alkatan, Hind, Edward, Deepak P., Elkhamary, Sahar M., Al-Mesfer, Saleh, Maktabi, Azza, Hurtado, Christopher G., Lee, Grace Y., Carcaboso, Angel M., Mumm, Jeff S., Safieh, Leen Abu, Eberhart, Charles G.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6430693/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30401983
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41388-018-0543-2
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author Asnaghi, Laura
White, David T.
Key, Nolan
Choi, Joshua
Mahale, Alka
Alkatan, Hind
Edward, Deepak P.
Elkhamary, Sahar M.
Al-Mesfer, Saleh
Maktabi, Azza
Hurtado, Christopher G.
Lee, Grace Y.
Carcaboso, Angel M.
Mumm, Jeff S.
Safieh, Leen Abu
Eberhart, Charles G.
author_facet Asnaghi, Laura
White, David T.
Key, Nolan
Choi, Joshua
Mahale, Alka
Alkatan, Hind
Edward, Deepak P.
Elkhamary, Sahar M.
Al-Mesfer, Saleh
Maktabi, Azza
Hurtado, Christopher G.
Lee, Grace Y.
Carcaboso, Angel M.
Mumm, Jeff S.
Safieh, Leen Abu
Eberhart, Charles G.
author_sort Asnaghi, Laura
collection PubMed
description Retinoblastoma is the most common intraocular cancer in children. While the primary tumor can often be treated by local or systemic chemotherapy, metastatic dissemination is generally resistant to therapy and remains a leading cause of pediatric cancer death in much of the world. In order to identify new therapeutic targets in aggressive tumors, we sequenced RNA transcripts in five snap frozen retinoblastomas which invaded the optic nerve and five which did not. A three-fold increase was noted in mRNA levels of ACVR1C/ALK7, a type I receptor of the TGF-β family, in invasive retinoblastomas, while downregulation of DACT2 and LEFTY2, negative modulators of the ACVR1C signaling, was observed in most invasive tumors. A two- to three-fold increase in ACVR1C mRNA was also found in invasive WERI Rb1 and Y79 cells as compared to non-invasive cells in vitro. Transcripts of ACVR1C receptor and its ligands (Nodal, Activin A/B, and GDF3) were expressed in six retinoblastoma lines, and evidence of downstream SMAD2 signaling was present in all these lines. Pharmacological inhibition of ACVR1C signaling using SB505124, or genetic downregulation of the receptor using shRNA potently suppressed invasion, growth, survival, and reduced the protein levels of the mesenchymal markers ZEB1 and Snail. The inhibitory effects on invasion, growth, and proliferation were recapitulated by knocking down SMAD2, but not SMAD3. Finally, in an orthotopic zebrafish model of retinoblastoma, a 55% decrease in tumor spread was noted (p=0.0026) when larvae were treated with 3 μM of SB505124, as compared to DMSO. Similarly, knockdown of ACVR1C in injected tumor cells using shRNA also resulted in a 54% reduction in tumor dissemination in the zebrafish eye as compared to scrambled shRNA control (p=0.0005). Our data support a role for the ACVR1C/SMAD2 pathway in promoting invasion and growth of retinoblastoma.
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spelling pubmed-64306932019-05-06 ACVR1C/SMAD2 signaling promotes invasion and growth in retinoblastoma Asnaghi, Laura White, David T. Key, Nolan Choi, Joshua Mahale, Alka Alkatan, Hind Edward, Deepak P. Elkhamary, Sahar M. Al-Mesfer, Saleh Maktabi, Azza Hurtado, Christopher G. Lee, Grace Y. Carcaboso, Angel M. Mumm, Jeff S. Safieh, Leen Abu Eberhart, Charles G. Oncogene Article Retinoblastoma is the most common intraocular cancer in children. While the primary tumor can often be treated by local or systemic chemotherapy, metastatic dissemination is generally resistant to therapy and remains a leading cause of pediatric cancer death in much of the world. In order to identify new therapeutic targets in aggressive tumors, we sequenced RNA transcripts in five snap frozen retinoblastomas which invaded the optic nerve and five which did not. A three-fold increase was noted in mRNA levels of ACVR1C/ALK7, a type I receptor of the TGF-β family, in invasive retinoblastomas, while downregulation of DACT2 and LEFTY2, negative modulators of the ACVR1C signaling, was observed in most invasive tumors. A two- to three-fold increase in ACVR1C mRNA was also found in invasive WERI Rb1 and Y79 cells as compared to non-invasive cells in vitro. Transcripts of ACVR1C receptor and its ligands (Nodal, Activin A/B, and GDF3) were expressed in six retinoblastoma lines, and evidence of downstream SMAD2 signaling was present in all these lines. Pharmacological inhibition of ACVR1C signaling using SB505124, or genetic downregulation of the receptor using shRNA potently suppressed invasion, growth, survival, and reduced the protein levels of the mesenchymal markers ZEB1 and Snail. The inhibitory effects on invasion, growth, and proliferation were recapitulated by knocking down SMAD2, but not SMAD3. Finally, in an orthotopic zebrafish model of retinoblastoma, a 55% decrease in tumor spread was noted (p=0.0026) when larvae were treated with 3 μM of SB505124, as compared to DMSO. Similarly, knockdown of ACVR1C in injected tumor cells using shRNA also resulted in a 54% reduction in tumor dissemination in the zebrafish eye as compared to scrambled shRNA control (p=0.0005). Our data support a role for the ACVR1C/SMAD2 pathway in promoting invasion and growth of retinoblastoma. 2018-11-06 2019-03 /pmc/articles/PMC6430693/ /pubmed/30401983 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41388-018-0543-2 Text en Users may view, print, copy, and download text and data-mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use: http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms
spellingShingle Article
Asnaghi, Laura
White, David T.
Key, Nolan
Choi, Joshua
Mahale, Alka
Alkatan, Hind
Edward, Deepak P.
Elkhamary, Sahar M.
Al-Mesfer, Saleh
Maktabi, Azza
Hurtado, Christopher G.
Lee, Grace Y.
Carcaboso, Angel M.
Mumm, Jeff S.
Safieh, Leen Abu
Eberhart, Charles G.
ACVR1C/SMAD2 signaling promotes invasion and growth in retinoblastoma
title ACVR1C/SMAD2 signaling promotes invasion and growth in retinoblastoma
title_full ACVR1C/SMAD2 signaling promotes invasion and growth in retinoblastoma
title_fullStr ACVR1C/SMAD2 signaling promotes invasion and growth in retinoblastoma
title_full_unstemmed ACVR1C/SMAD2 signaling promotes invasion and growth in retinoblastoma
title_short ACVR1C/SMAD2 signaling promotes invasion and growth in retinoblastoma
title_sort acvr1c/smad2 signaling promotes invasion and growth in retinoblastoma
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6430693/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30401983
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41388-018-0543-2
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