10 research outputs found
Potential Use of Gluconate in Cancer Therapy
We have recently discovered that cancer cells take up extracellular citrate through plasma membrane citrate transporter (pmCiC) and advantageously use citrate for their metabolism. Citrate uptake can be blocked with gluconate and this results in decreased tumor growth and altered metabolic characteristics of tumor tissue. Interestingly, gluconate, considered to be physiologically neutral, is incidentally used in medicine as a cation carrier, but not as a therapeutically active substance. In this review we discuss the results of our recent research with available literature and suggest that gluconate may be useful in the treatment of cancer
The Role of Citrate Homeostasis in Merkel Cell Carcinoma Pathogenesis
Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC) is a rare but highly aggressive tumor of the skin with a poor prognosis. The factors driving this cancer must be better understood in order to discover novel targets for more effective therapies. In the search for targets, we followed our interest in citrate as a central and critical metabolite linked to fatty acid synthesis in cancer development. A key to citrate uptake in cancer cells is the high expression of the plasma membrane citrate transporter (pmCiC), which is upregulated in the different adenocarcinoma types tested so far. In this study, we show that the pmCiC is also highly expressed in Merkel cell carcinoma cell lines by western blot and human tissues by immunohistochemistry staining. In the presence of extracellular citrate, MCC cells show an increased proliferation rate in vitro; a specific pmCiC inhibitor (Na+-gluconate) blocks this citrate-induced proliferation. Furthermore, the 3D in vivo Chick Chorioallantoic Membrane (CAM) model showed that the application of Na+-gluconate also decreases Merkel cell carcinoma growth. Based on our results, we conclude that pmCiC and extracellular citrate uptake should be considered further as a potential novel target for the treatment of Merkel cell carcinoma
Continuous Water Infusion Enhances Atmospheric Pressure Chemical Ionization of Methyl Chloroformate Derivatives in Gas Chromatography Coupled to Time-of-Flight Mass Spectrometry-Based Metabolomics
The
effects of continuous water infusion on efficiency and repeatability
of atmospheric pressure chemical ionization of both methyl chloroformate
(MCF) and methoxime-trimethylsilyl (MO-TMS) derivatives of metabolites
were evaluated using gas chromatography–time-of-flight mass
spectrometry. Water infusion at a flow-rate of 0.4 mL/h yielded not
only an average 16.6-fold increase in intensity of the quasimolecular
ion for 20 MCF-derivatized metabolite standards through suppression
of in-source fragmentation but also the most repeatable peak area
integrals. The impact of water infusion was the greatest for dicarboxylic
acids and the least for (hetero-) aromatic compounds. Water infusion
also improved the ability to detect reliably fold changes as small
as 1.33-fold for the same 20 MCF-derivatized metabolite standards
spiked into a human serum extract. On the other hand, MO-TMS derivatives
were not significantly affected by water infusion, neither in their
fragmentation patterns nor with regard to the detection of differentially
regulated compounds. As a proof of principle, we applied MCF derivatization
and GC-APCI-TOFMS to the detection of changes in abundance of metabolites
in pancreatic cancer cells upon treatment with 17-DMAG. Water infusion
increased not only the number of metabolites identified via their
quasimolecular ion but also the reproducibility of peak areas, thereby
almost doubling the number of significantly regulated metabolites
(false discovery rate < 0.05) to a total of 23
STAT5b as Molecular Target in Pancreatic Cancer—Inhibition of Tumor Growth, Angiogenesis, and Metastases
The prognosis of patients suffering from pancreatic cancer is still poor and novel therapeutic options are urgently needed. Recently, the transcription factor signal transducer and activator of transcription 5b (STAT5b) was associated with tumor progression in human solid cancer. Hence, we assessed whether STAT5b might serve as an anticancer target in ductal pancreatic adenocarcinoma (DPAC). We found that nuclear expression of STAT5b can be detected in approximately 50% of DPAC. Blockade of STAT5b by stable shRNA-mediated knockdown showed no effects on tumor cell growth in vitro. However, inhibition of tumor cell motility was found even in response to stimulation with epidermal growth factor or interleukin-6. These findings were paralleled by a reduction of prometastatic and proangiogenic factors in vitro. Subsequent in vivo experiments revealed a strong growth inhibition on STAT5b blockade in subcutaneous and orthotopic models. These findings were paralleled by impaired tumor angiogenesis in vivo. In contrast to the subcutaneous model, the orthotopic model revealed a strong reduction of tumor cell proliferation that emphasizes the meaning of assessing targets in an appropriate microenvironment. Taken together, our results suggest that STAT5b might be a potential novel target for human DPAC