Cargando…

Orthogonal targeting of osteoclasts and myeloma cells for radionuclide stimulated dynamic therapy induces multidimensional cell death pathways

Rationale: Multiple myeloma (MM) is a multifocal malignancy of bone marrow plasma cells, characterized by vicious cycles of remission and relapse that eventually culminate in death. The disease remains mostly incurable largely due to the complex interactions between the bone microenvironment (BME) a...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Zheleznyak, Alexander, Mixdorf, Matthew, Marsala, Lynne, Prior, Julie, Yang, Xiaoxia, Cui, Grace, Xu, Baogang, Fletcher, Steven, Fontana, Francesca, Lanza, Gregory, Achilefu, Samuel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Ivyspring International Publisher 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8315072/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34335961
http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/thno.60757
_version_ 1783729664618921984
author Zheleznyak, Alexander
Mixdorf, Matthew
Marsala, Lynne
Prior, Julie
Yang, Xiaoxia
Cui, Grace
Xu, Baogang
Fletcher, Steven
Fontana, Francesca
Lanza, Gregory
Achilefu, Samuel
author_facet Zheleznyak, Alexander
Mixdorf, Matthew
Marsala, Lynne
Prior, Julie
Yang, Xiaoxia
Cui, Grace
Xu, Baogang
Fletcher, Steven
Fontana, Francesca
Lanza, Gregory
Achilefu, Samuel
author_sort Zheleznyak, Alexander
collection PubMed
description Rationale: Multiple myeloma (MM) is a multifocal malignancy of bone marrow plasma cells, characterized by vicious cycles of remission and relapse that eventually culminate in death. The disease remains mostly incurable largely due to the complex interactions between the bone microenvironment (BME) and MM cells (MMC). In the “vicious cycle” of bone disease, abnormal activation of osteoclasts (OCs) by MMC causes severe osteolysis, promotes immune evasion, and stimulates the growth of MMC. Disrupting these cancer-stroma interactions would enhance treatment response. Methods: To disrupt this cycle, we orthogonally targeted nanomicelles (NM) loaded with non-therapeutic doses of a photosensitizer, titanocene (TC), to VLA-4 (α4ß1, CD49d/CD29) expressing MMC (MM1.S) and αvß3 (CD51/CD61) expressing OC. Concurrently, a non-lethal dose of a radiopharmaceutical, (18)F-fluorodeoxyglucose ([(18)F]FDG) administered systemically interacted with TC (radionuclide stimulated therapy, RaST) to generate cytotoxic reactive oxygen species (ROS). The in vitro and in vivo effects of RaST were characterized in MM1.S cell line, as well as in xenograft and isograft MM animal models. Results: Our data revealed that RaST induced non-enzymatic hydroperoxidation of cellular lipids culminating in mitochondrial dysfunction, DNA fragmentation, and caspase-dependent apoptosis of MMC using VLA-4 avid TC-NMs. RaST upregulated the expression of BAX, Bcl-2, and p53, highlighting the induction of apoptosis via the BAK-independent pathway. The enhancement of multicopper oxidase enzyme F5 expression, which inhibits lipid hydroperoxidation and Fenton reaction, was not sufficient to overcome RaST-induced increase in the accumulation of irreversible function-perturbing α,ß-aldehydes that exerted significant and long-lasting damage to both DNA and proteins. In vivo, either VLA-4-TC-NM or αvß3-TC-NMs RaST induced a significant therapeutic effect on immunocompromised but not immunocompetent MM-bearing mouse models. Combined treatment with both VLA-4-TC-NM and αvß3-TC-NMs synergistically inhibited osteolysis, reduced tumor burden, and prevented rapid relapse in both in vivo models of MM. Conclusions: By targeting MM and bone cells simultaneously, combination RaST suppressed MM disease progression through a multi-prong action on the vicious cycle of bone cancer. Instead of using the standard multidrug approach, our work reveals a unique photophysical treatment paradigm that uses nontoxic doses of a single light-sensitive drug directed orthogonally to cancer and bone cells, followed by radionuclide-stimulated generation of ROS to inhibit tumor progression and minimize osteolysis in both immunocompetent murine and immunocompromised human MM models.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8315072
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher Ivyspring International Publisher
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-83150722021-07-30 Orthogonal targeting of osteoclasts and myeloma cells for radionuclide stimulated dynamic therapy induces multidimensional cell death pathways Zheleznyak, Alexander Mixdorf, Matthew Marsala, Lynne Prior, Julie Yang, Xiaoxia Cui, Grace Xu, Baogang Fletcher, Steven Fontana, Francesca Lanza, Gregory Achilefu, Samuel Theranostics Research Paper Rationale: Multiple myeloma (MM) is a multifocal malignancy of bone marrow plasma cells, characterized by vicious cycles of remission and relapse that eventually culminate in death. The disease remains mostly incurable largely due to the complex interactions between the bone microenvironment (BME) and MM cells (MMC). In the “vicious cycle” of bone disease, abnormal activation of osteoclasts (OCs) by MMC causes severe osteolysis, promotes immune evasion, and stimulates the growth of MMC. Disrupting these cancer-stroma interactions would enhance treatment response. Methods: To disrupt this cycle, we orthogonally targeted nanomicelles (NM) loaded with non-therapeutic doses of a photosensitizer, titanocene (TC), to VLA-4 (α4ß1, CD49d/CD29) expressing MMC (MM1.S) and αvß3 (CD51/CD61) expressing OC. Concurrently, a non-lethal dose of a radiopharmaceutical, (18)F-fluorodeoxyglucose ([(18)F]FDG) administered systemically interacted with TC (radionuclide stimulated therapy, RaST) to generate cytotoxic reactive oxygen species (ROS). The in vitro and in vivo effects of RaST were characterized in MM1.S cell line, as well as in xenograft and isograft MM animal models. Results: Our data revealed that RaST induced non-enzymatic hydroperoxidation of cellular lipids culminating in mitochondrial dysfunction, DNA fragmentation, and caspase-dependent apoptosis of MMC using VLA-4 avid TC-NMs. RaST upregulated the expression of BAX, Bcl-2, and p53, highlighting the induction of apoptosis via the BAK-independent pathway. The enhancement of multicopper oxidase enzyme F5 expression, which inhibits lipid hydroperoxidation and Fenton reaction, was not sufficient to overcome RaST-induced increase in the accumulation of irreversible function-perturbing α,ß-aldehydes that exerted significant and long-lasting damage to both DNA and proteins. In vivo, either VLA-4-TC-NM or αvß3-TC-NMs RaST induced a significant therapeutic effect on immunocompromised but not immunocompetent MM-bearing mouse models. Combined treatment with both VLA-4-TC-NM and αvß3-TC-NMs synergistically inhibited osteolysis, reduced tumor burden, and prevented rapid relapse in both in vivo models of MM. Conclusions: By targeting MM and bone cells simultaneously, combination RaST suppressed MM disease progression through a multi-prong action on the vicious cycle of bone cancer. Instead of using the standard multidrug approach, our work reveals a unique photophysical treatment paradigm that uses nontoxic doses of a single light-sensitive drug directed orthogonally to cancer and bone cells, followed by radionuclide-stimulated generation of ROS to inhibit tumor progression and minimize osteolysis in both immunocompetent murine and immunocompromised human MM models. Ivyspring International Publisher 2021-06-22 /pmc/articles/PMC8315072/ /pubmed/34335961 http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/thno.60757 Text en © The author(s) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). See http://ivyspring.com/terms for full terms and conditions.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Zheleznyak, Alexander
Mixdorf, Matthew
Marsala, Lynne
Prior, Julie
Yang, Xiaoxia
Cui, Grace
Xu, Baogang
Fletcher, Steven
Fontana, Francesca
Lanza, Gregory
Achilefu, Samuel
Orthogonal targeting of osteoclasts and myeloma cells for radionuclide stimulated dynamic therapy induces multidimensional cell death pathways
title Orthogonal targeting of osteoclasts and myeloma cells for radionuclide stimulated dynamic therapy induces multidimensional cell death pathways
title_full Orthogonal targeting of osteoclasts and myeloma cells for radionuclide stimulated dynamic therapy induces multidimensional cell death pathways
title_fullStr Orthogonal targeting of osteoclasts and myeloma cells for radionuclide stimulated dynamic therapy induces multidimensional cell death pathways
title_full_unstemmed Orthogonal targeting of osteoclasts and myeloma cells for radionuclide stimulated dynamic therapy induces multidimensional cell death pathways
title_short Orthogonal targeting of osteoclasts and myeloma cells for radionuclide stimulated dynamic therapy induces multidimensional cell death pathways
title_sort orthogonal targeting of osteoclasts and myeloma cells for radionuclide stimulated dynamic therapy induces multidimensional cell death pathways
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8315072/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34335961
http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/thno.60757
work_keys_str_mv AT zheleznyakalexander orthogonaltargetingofosteoclastsandmyelomacellsforradionuclidestimulateddynamictherapyinducesmultidimensionalcelldeathpathways
AT mixdorfmatthew orthogonaltargetingofosteoclastsandmyelomacellsforradionuclidestimulateddynamictherapyinducesmultidimensionalcelldeathpathways
AT marsalalynne orthogonaltargetingofosteoclastsandmyelomacellsforradionuclidestimulateddynamictherapyinducesmultidimensionalcelldeathpathways
AT priorjulie orthogonaltargetingofosteoclastsandmyelomacellsforradionuclidestimulateddynamictherapyinducesmultidimensionalcelldeathpathways
AT yangxiaoxia orthogonaltargetingofosteoclastsandmyelomacellsforradionuclidestimulateddynamictherapyinducesmultidimensionalcelldeathpathways
AT cuigrace orthogonaltargetingofosteoclastsandmyelomacellsforradionuclidestimulateddynamictherapyinducesmultidimensionalcelldeathpathways
AT xubaogang orthogonaltargetingofosteoclastsandmyelomacellsforradionuclidestimulateddynamictherapyinducesmultidimensionalcelldeathpathways
AT fletchersteven orthogonaltargetingofosteoclastsandmyelomacellsforradionuclidestimulateddynamictherapyinducesmultidimensionalcelldeathpathways
AT fontanafrancesca orthogonaltargetingofosteoclastsandmyelomacellsforradionuclidestimulateddynamictherapyinducesmultidimensionalcelldeathpathways
AT lanzagregory orthogonaltargetingofosteoclastsandmyelomacellsforradionuclidestimulateddynamictherapyinducesmultidimensionalcelldeathpathways
AT achilefusamuel orthogonaltargetingofosteoclastsandmyelomacellsforradionuclidestimulateddynamictherapyinducesmultidimensionalcelldeathpathways