95 research outputs found
Examination of effects of GSK3β phosphorylation, β-catenin phosphorylation, and β-catenin degradation on kinetics of Wnt signaling pathway using computational method
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Recent experiments have explored effects of activities of kinases other than the well-studied GSK3β, in wnt pathway signaling, particularly at the level of β-catenin. It has also been found that the kinase PKA attenuates β-catenin degradation. However, the effects of these kinases on the level and degradation of β-catenin and the resulting downstream transcription activity remain to be clarified. Furthermore, the effect of GSK3β phosphorylation on the β-catenin level has not been examined computationally. In the present study, the effects of phosphorylation of GSK3β and of phosphorylations and degradation of β-catenin on the kinetics of the wnt signaling pathway were examined computationally.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>The well-known computational Lee-Heinrich kinetic model of the wnt pathway was modified to include these effects. The rate laws of reactions in the modified model were solved numerically to examine these effects on β-catenin level.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The computations showed that the β-catenin level is almost linearly proportional to the phosphorylation activity of GSK3β. The dependence of β-catenin level on the phosphorylation and degradation of free β-catenin and downstream TCF activity can be analyzed with an approximate, simple function of kinetic parameters for added reaction steps associated with effects examined, rationalizing the experimental results.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The phosphorylations of β-catenin by kinases other than GSK3β involve free unphorphorylated β-catenin rather than GSK3β-phosphorylated β-catenin*. In order to account for the observed enhancement of TCF activity, the β-catenin dephosphorylation step is essential, and the kinetic parameters of β-catenin phosphorylation and degradation need to meet a condition described in the main text. These findings should be useful for future experiments.</p
Kinetics of Wnt-Driven β-Catenin Stabilization Revealed by Quantitative and Temporal Imaging
The Wnt/β-catenin signal transduction pathway regulates a broad range of developmental processes. Aberrant activation of the Wnt pathway leads to cancer and degenerative diseases. β-catenin is a key signaling molecule that is frequently used as a direct monitor of Wnt pathway activation. This paper describes a multi-parametric method for quantitative analysis of cellular β-catenin protein levels in a rapid and high-throughput manner. The assay offers temporally resolved detection of Wnt-stimulated accumulation of β-catenin, simultaneously detecting cell number, and it sheds light onto the kinetics of posttranslational stabilization of β-catenin
The Internally Truncated LRP5 Receptor Presents a Therapeutic Target in Breast Cancer
BACKGROUND: Breast cancer is a common malignant disease, which may be caused by a number of genes deregulated by genomic or epigenomic events. Deregulated WNT/beta-catenin signaling with accumulation of beta-catenin is common in breast tumors, but mutations in WNT signaling pathway components have been rare. An aberrantly spliced internally truncated LRP5 receptor (LRP5Delta666-809, LRP5Delta) was shown recently to be resistant to DKK1 inhibition, and was required for beta-catenin accumulation in hyperparathyroid tumors and parathyroid tumor growth. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Here we show, by reverse transcription PCR and Western blot analysis, that LRP5Delta is frequently expressed in breast tumors of different cancer stage (58-100%), including carcinoma in situ and metastatic carcinoma. LRP5Delta was required in MCF7 breast cancer cells for the non-phosphorylated active beta-catenin level, transcription activity of beta-catenin, cell growth in vitro, and breast tumor growth in a xenograft SCID mouse model. WNT3 ligand, but not WNT1 and WNT3A augmented the endogenous beta-catenin activity of MCF7 cells in a DKK1-insensitive manner. Furthermore, an anti-LRP5 antibody attenuated beta-catenin activity, inhibited cell growth, and induced apoptosis in LRP5Delta-positive MCF7 and T-47D breast cancer cells, but not in control cells. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our results suggest that the LRP5Delta receptor is strongly implicated in mammary gland tumorigenesis and that its aberrant expression present an early event during disease progression. LRP5 antibody therapy may have a significant role in the treatment of breast cancer
Microenvironmental IL1 1 β promotes metastatic colonisation of breast cancer cells in the bone via activation of Wnt-dependent cancer stem cell activity
Dissemination of tumour cells to the bone marrow is an early event in breast cancer, however cells may lie dormant for many years before bone metastases develop. Treatment for bone metastases is not curative, therefore new adjuvant therapies which prevent the colonisation of disseminated cells into metastatic lesions are required. There is evidence that cancer stem cells (CSCs) within breast tumours are capable of metastasis, but the mechanism by which these colonise bone is unknown. Here, we establish that bone marrow-derived IL1β stimulates breast cancer cell colonisation in the bone by inducing intracellular NFkB and CREB signalling in breast cancer cells, leading to autocrine Wnt signalling and CSC colony formation. Importantly, we show that inhibition of this pathway prevents both CSC colony formation in the bone environment, and bone metastasis. These findings establish that targeting IL1β-NFKB/CREB-Wnt signalling should be considered for adjuvant therapy to prevent breast cancer bone metastasis
RSPO3 impacts body fat distribution and regulates adipose cell biology in vitro
Fat distribution is an independent cardiometabolic risk factor. However, its molecular and cellular underpinnings remain obscure. Here we demonstrate that two independent GWAS signals at RSPO3, which are associated with increased body mass index-adjusted waist-to-hip ratio, act to specifically increase RSPO3 expression in subcutaneous adipocytes. These variants are also associated with reduced lower-body fat, enlarged gluteal adipocytes and insulin resistance. Based on human cellular studies RSPO3 may limit gluteofemoral adipose tissue (AT) expansion by suppressing adipogenesis and increasing gluteal adipocyte susceptibility to apoptosis. RSPO3 may also promote upper-body fat distribution by stimulating abdominal adipose progenitor (AP) proliferation. The distinct biological responses elicited by RSPO3 in abdominal versus gluteal APs in vitro are associated with differential changes in WNT signalling. Zebrafish carrying a nonsense rspo3 mutation display altered fat distribution. Our study identifies RSPO3 as an important determinant of peripheral AT storage capacity
Peripheral T-lymphocytes express WNT7A and its restoration in leukemia-derived lymphoblasts inhibits cell proliferation
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>WNT7a, a member of the Wnt ligand family implicated in several developmental processes, has also been reported to be dysregulated in some types of tumors; however, its function and implication in oncogenesis is poorly understood. Moreover, the expression of this gene and the role that it plays in the biology of blood cells remains unclear. In addition to determining the expression of the <it>WNT7A </it>gene in blood cells, in leukemia-derived cell lines, and in samples of patients with leukemia, the aim of this study was to seek the effect of this gene in proliferation.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We analyzed peripheral blood mononuclear cells, sorted CD3 and CD19 cells, four leukemia-derived cell lines, and blood samples from 14 patients with Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), and 19 clinically healthy subjects. Reverse transcription followed by quantitative Real-time Polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) analysis were performed to determine relative <it>WNT7A </it>expression. Restoration of WNT7a was done employing a lentiviral system and by using a recombinant human protein. Cell proliferation was measured by addition of WST-1 to cell cultures.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>WNT7a is mainly produced by CD3 T-lymphocytes, its expression decreases upon activation, and it is severely reduced in leukemia-derived cell lines, as well as in the blood samples of patients with ALL when compared with healthy controls (<it>p </it>≤0.001). By restoring <it>WNT7A </it>expression in leukemia-derived cells, we were able to demonstrate that WNT7a inhibits cell growth. A similar effect was observed when a recombinant human WNT7a protein was used. Interestingly, restoration of <it>WNT7A </it>expression in Jurkat cells did not activate the canonical Wnt/β-catenin pathway.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>To our knowledge, this is the first report evidencing quantitatively decreased <it>WNT7A </it>levels in leukemia-derived cells and that <it>WNT7A </it>restoration in T-lymphocytes inhibits cell proliferation. In addition, our results also support the possible function of <it>WNT7A </it>as a tumor suppressor gene as well as a therapeutic tool.</p
Replicating adenoviruses targeting tumours with constitutive activation of the Wnt signalling pathway
Abstract
Activation of the Wnt pathway through mutation of the adenomatous polyposis coli and 13-catenin genes is a hallmark of colon cancer. These mutations lead to constitutive activation of transcription from promoters containing binding sites for Tcf/LEF transcription factors. Tumour-selective replicating oncolytic viruses are promising agents for cancer therapy. They can in principle spread throughout a tumour mass until all the cancerous cells are killed, and clinical trials have shown that they are safe except at very high doses. Adenoviruses are interesting candidates for virotherapy because their biology is well understood and their small genome can be rapidly mutated. Adenoviruses with Tcf binding sites in the E2 early promoter replicate selectively in cells with an active Wnt pathway. Although these viruses can replicate in a broad panel of colon cancer cell lines, some colorectal cancer cells are only semi-permissive for Tcf-virus replication.
The aim of my thesis was to increase the safety and the efficacy of Tcf-viruses for colon cancer virotherapy. I replaced the endogenous ElA viral promoter by four Tcf binding sites and showed that transcription from the mutant promoter was specifically activated by the Wnt pathway. A virus with Tcf binding sites in the ElA and E4 promoters was more selective for the Wnt pathway than the former Tcf-E2 viruses. Moreover, insertion of Tcf binding sites into all early promoters further increased viral selectivity, but reduced viral activity. I showed that Tcf-dependent transcription was inhibited by the interaction between ElA and p300, but deletion of the p300-binding site of ElA generally led to viral attenuation. In the semi-permissive cell lines, replication of Tcf-viruses remained lower than that of the wild-type virus. The E2 promoter was the most sensitive to the cell type, but I was unable to improve its activity by targeted mutagenesis. To increase the toxicity of the Tcf-E1A/E4 virus, I decided to express a suicide gene, yeast cytosine deaminase (yCD), late during infection. This enzyme converts the prodrug 5-FC to the cytotoxic agent 5-FU. yCD was expressed in a DNA replication-dependent manner and increased viral toxicity in presence of 5-FC. Tcf-ElA and yCD adenoviruses are potentially useful vectors for the treatment of liver metastases from colorectal tumours.
Résumé
Dans la quasi-totalité des cancers du côlon, la voie Wnt est activée par des mutations dans les gènes codant pour APC ou pour la (3-caténine. Ces mutations activent de façon constitutive la transcription de promoteurs contenant des sites de liaison pour les facteurs de transcription Tcf/LEF. Les virus réplicatifs spécifiques aux tumeurs sont des agents prometteurs pour la thérapie cancéreuse. En principe, ces vecteurs peuvent se propager dans une masse tumorale jusqu'à destruction de toutes les cellules cancéreuses, et des études cliniques ont démontré que de tels vecteurs n'étaient pas toxiques, sauf à de très hautes doses. Les adénovirus sont des candidats intéressants pour la thérapie virale car leur biologie est bien définie et leur petit génome peut être rapidement modifié. Des adénovirus comportant des sites de liaison à Tcf dans leur promoteur précoce E2 se répliquent sélectivement dans les cellules qui possèdent une voie Wnt active. Ces virus sont capables de se répliquer dans un grand nombre de cellules cancéreuses du côlon, bien que certaines de ces cellules ne soient que semi-permissives pour la réplication des virus Tcf.
Le but de ma thèse était d'augmenter la sécurité et l'efficacité des virus Tcf. Le promoteur viral endogène ElA a été remplacé par quatre sites de liaison à Tcf, ce qui a rendu son activation dépendante de la voie Wnt. Un virus comportant des sites de liaison pour Tcf dans les promoteurs ElA et E4 était plus sélectif pour la voie Wnt que les précédents virus Tcf-E2, et un virus comportant des sites Tcf dans tous les promoteurs précoces était encore plus sélectif, mais moins actif. J'ai montré que l'interaction entre ElA et p300 inhibait la transcription dépendante de Tcf, mais la délétion du domaine concerné dans ElA a eu pour effet d'atténuer les virus. Dans les cellules semi-permissives, la réplication des virus Tcf était toujours plus basse que celle du virus sauvage. J'ai identifié le promoteur E2 comme étant le plus sensible au type cellulaire, mais n'ai pas pu augmenter son activité par mutagenèse. Pour augmenter la toxicité du virus Tcf-E1A/E4, j'ai décidé d'exprimer un gène suicide, la cytosine déaminase (yCD), pendant la phase tardive de l'infection. Cette enzyme transforme la procirogue 5-FC en l'agent cytotoxique 5-FU. yCD était exprimée après réplication de l'ADN viral et augmentait la toxicité virale en présence de 5-FC. Les virus Tcf-ElA et yCD sont des vecteurs potentiellement utiles pour le traitement des métastases hépatiques de cancers colorectaux
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