Abstract
Pancreatic-ductal-adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is amongst the most lethal malignancies, mainly because of its metastatic spread and multifactorial chemoresistance. Since c-Met is a marker of pancreatic-cancer-stem-cells (CSC), playing a key role in metastasis and chemoresistance, this study evaluated the therapeutic potential of the novel c-Met/ALK inhibitor crizotinib against PDAC cells, including the Capan-1-gemcitabine-resistant cells (Capan-1-R).
Crizotinib inhibited PDAC cell-growth with IC50 of 1.5 μM in Capan-1-R, and synergistically enhanced the antiproliferative and proapoptotic activity of gemcitabine, as detected by sulforhodamine-B-assay, flow cytometry and combination-index method. Capan-1-R had higher expression of the CSC markers CD44+/CD133+/CD326+, but their combined expression was significantly reduced by crizotinib, as detected by quantitative-RT-PCR and FACS-analysis. Similarly, Capan-1-R cells had significantly higher protein-expression of c-Met (≈2-fold), and increased migratory activity, which was reduced by crizotinib (e.g., >50% reduction of cell-migration in Capan-1-R after 8-hour exposure, compared to untreated-cells), in association with reduced vimentin expression. Capan-1-R had also significantly higher mRNA expression of the gemcitabine catabolism-enzyme CDA, potentially explaining the higher CDA activity and statistically significant lower levels of gemcitabine-nucleotides in Capan-1-R compared to Capan-1, as detected by Liquid-chromatography-massspectrometry. Conversely, crizotinib significantly reduced CDA expression in both Capan-1 and Capan-1-R cells.
In aggregate, these data show the ability of crizotinib to specifically target CSC-like-subpopulations, interfere with cell-proliferation, induce apoptosis, reduce migration and synergistically interact with gemcitabine, supporting further studies on this novel therapeutic approach for PDAC.
Keywords: Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma, c-Met pathway, cancer stem cells, crizotinib, gemcitabine, Capan-1-gemcitabine-resistant cells (Capan-1-R), sulforhodamine-B-assay, flow cytometry, combination-index method, cell-growth
Current Pharmaceutical Design
Title:Enhancement of the Antiproliferative Activity of Gemcitabine by Modulation of c-Met Pathway in Pancreatic Cancer
Volume: 19 Issue: 5
Author(s): Amir Avan, Karl Quint, Francesco Nicolini, Niccola Funel, Adam E. Frampton, Mina Maftouh, Serena Pelliccioni, Gerrit J. Schuurhuis, Godefridus J. Peters and Elisa Giovannetti
Affiliation:
Keywords: Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma, c-Met pathway, cancer stem cells, crizotinib, gemcitabine, Capan-1-gemcitabine-resistant cells (Capan-1-R), sulforhodamine-B-assay, flow cytometry, combination-index method, cell-growth
Abstract: Pancreatic-ductal-adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is amongst the most lethal malignancies, mainly because of its metastatic spread and multifactorial chemoresistance. Since c-Met is a marker of pancreatic-cancer-stem-cells (CSC), playing a key role in metastasis and chemoresistance, this study evaluated the therapeutic potential of the novel c-Met/ALK inhibitor crizotinib against PDAC cells, including the Capan-1-gemcitabine-resistant cells (Capan-1-R).
Crizotinib inhibited PDAC cell-growth with IC50 of 1.5 μM in Capan-1-R, and synergistically enhanced the antiproliferative and proapoptotic activity of gemcitabine, as detected by sulforhodamine-B-assay, flow cytometry and combination-index method. Capan-1-R had higher expression of the CSC markers CD44+/CD133+/CD326+, but their combined expression was significantly reduced by crizotinib, as detected by quantitative-RT-PCR and FACS-analysis. Similarly, Capan-1-R cells had significantly higher protein-expression of c-Met (≈2-fold), and increased migratory activity, which was reduced by crizotinib (e.g., >50% reduction of cell-migration in Capan-1-R after 8-hour exposure, compared to untreated-cells), in association with reduced vimentin expression. Capan-1-R had also significantly higher mRNA expression of the gemcitabine catabolism-enzyme CDA, potentially explaining the higher CDA activity and statistically significant lower levels of gemcitabine-nucleotides in Capan-1-R compared to Capan-1, as detected by Liquid-chromatography-massspectrometry. Conversely, crizotinib significantly reduced CDA expression in both Capan-1 and Capan-1-R cells.
In aggregate, these data show the ability of crizotinib to specifically target CSC-like-subpopulations, interfere with cell-proliferation, induce apoptosis, reduce migration and synergistically interact with gemcitabine, supporting further studies on this novel therapeutic approach for PDAC.
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Avan Amir, Quint Karl, Nicolini Francesco, Funel Niccola, E. Frampton Adam, Maftouh Mina, Pelliccioni Serena, J. Schuurhuis Gerrit, J. Peters Godefridus and Giovannetti Elisa, Enhancement of the Antiproliferative Activity of Gemcitabine by Modulation of c-Met Pathway in Pancreatic Cancer, Current Pharmaceutical Design 2013; 19 (5) . https://dx.doi.org/10.2174/1381612811306050940
DOI https://dx.doi.org/10.2174/1381612811306050940 |
Print ISSN 1381-6128 |
Publisher Name Bentham Science Publisher |
Online ISSN 1873-4286 |
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