6 research outputs found

    A highly selective purine-based inhibitor of CSF1R potently inhibits osteoclast differentiation

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    The colony-stimulating factor 1 receptor (CSF1R) plays an important role in the regulation of many inflammatory processes, and overexpression of the kinase is implicated in several disease states. Identifying selective, smallmolecule inhibitors of CSF1R may be a crucial step toward treating these disorders. Through modelling, synthesis, and a systematic structure-activity relationship study, we have identified a number of potent and highly selective purine-based inhibitors of CSF1R. The optimized 6,8-disubstituted antagonist, compound 9, has enzymatic IC50 of 0.2 nM, and displays a strong affinity toward the autoinhibited form of CSF1R, contrasting that of other previously reported inhibitors. As a result of its binding mode, the inhibitor shows excellent selectivity (Selectivity score: 0.06), evidenced by profiling towards a panel of 468 kinases. In cell-based assays, this inhibitor shows dose-dependent blockade of CSF1-mediated downstream signalling in murine bone marrow-derived macrophages (IC50 = 106 nM) as well as disruption of osteoclast differentiation at nanomolar levels. In vivo experiments, however, indicate that improve metabolic stability is needed in order to further progress this compound class

    Analysis of interaction of murine 66cl4 and 67NR breast carcinomas with tumor-associated macrophages

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    Breast cancer is the most common cancer among women in the world, and death is usually caused by metastasis. A tumor is a heterogeneous mass of different cells, and the tumor microenvironment is complex with extensive communication between the different cell types. Tumor cells are able to polarize cells of the microenvironment, like macrophages, by secreting different compounds including members of the TGF-β superfamily. Macrophages can be polarized towards classically activated M1 macrophages or alternatively activated M2 macrophages. Tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) are mainly M2 macrophages and support tumor growth by promoting tumor cell survival and proliferation, matrix remodeling, angiogenesis and metastasis. The number of macrophages in a tumor is correlated with poor prognosis in breast cancer patients. By utilizing the 4T1 breast cancer mouse model the communication between tumor cells and macrophages was studied. Transcriptome data of cell lines and primary tumors of the non-metastatic 67NR and the metastasizing 66cl4 showed a higher amount of M2 macrophage markers in 66cl4 primary tumors. 66cl4 cells also produce and secrete the TGF-β superfamily member BMP4, as well as its antagonist GREM1. GREM1 was produced even more in 168FARN cell lines, as well as found to be cell surface-associated. High amount of GREM1 is correlated to poor prognosis in breast cancer patients. By adding conditioned medium from the tumor cells to RAW 264.7 macrophages, it was seen that conditioned medium from 168FARN, 66cl4 and 4T1 potently inhibited both basal and rmBMP4-stimulated SMAD signaling. Conditioned medium from 66cl4 also upregulated the inflammatory signaling in RAW 264.7 macrophages by activating STAT1. In bone marrow-derived macrophages (BMDMs) it was seen that both conditioned medium from 67NR, 168FARN and 66cl4, as well as the presence of them in a transwell changed the morphology of the BMDMs. The presence of 67NR, 168FARN and 66cl4 cells also activated the SMAD pathway of the BMDMs. Further research is however needed to see if the regulation of the SMAD pathway in macrophages is related to the different functions of macrophages in tumors

    GREM1 is associated with metastasis and predicts poor prognosis in ER-negative breast cancer patients

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    Background In breast cancer, activation of bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) signaling and elevated levels of BMP-antagonists have been linked to tumor progression and metastasis. However, the simultaneous upregulation of BMPs and their antagonist, and the fact that both promote tumor aggressiveness seems contradictory and is not fully understood. Methods We analyzed the transcriptomes of the metastatic 66cl4 and the non-metastatic 67NR cell lines of the 4T1 mouse mammary tumor model to search for factors that promote metastasis. CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing was used for mechanistic studies in the same cell lines. Furthermore, we analyzed gene expression patterns in human breast cancer biopsies obtained from public datasets to evaluate co-expression and possible relations to clinical outcome. Results We found that mRNA levels of the BMP-antagonist Grem1, encoding gremlin1, and the ligand Bmp4 were both significantly upregulated in cells and primary tumors of 66cl4 compared to 67NR. Depletion of gremlin1 in 66cl4 could impair metastasis to the lungs in this model. Furthermore, we found that expression of Grem1 correlated with upregulation of several stem cell markers in 66cl4 cells compared to 67NR cells. Both in the mouse model and in patients, expression of GREM1 associated with extracellular matrix organization, and formation, biosynthesis and modification of collagen. Importantly, high expression of GREM1 predicted poor prognosis in estrogen receptor negative breast cancer patients. Analyses of large patient cohorts revealed that amplification of genes encoding BMP-antagonists and elevation of the corresponding transcripts is evident in biopsies from more than half of the patients and much more frequent for the secreted BMP-antagonists than the intracellular inhibitors of SMAD signaling. Conclusion In conclusion, our results show that GREM1 is associated with metastasis and predicts poor prognosis in ER-negative breast cancer patients. Gremlin1 could represent a novel target for therapy

    Tumor Targeting by αvβ3-Integrin-Specific Lipid Nanoparticles Occurs via Phagocyte Hitchhiking

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    Although the first nanomedicine was clinically approved more than two decades ago, nanoparticles’ (NP) in vivo behavior is complex and the immune system’s role in their application remains elusive. At present, only passive-targeting nanoformulations have been clinically approved, while more complicated active-targeting strategies typically fail to advance from the early clinical phase stage. This absence of clinical translation is, among others, due to the very limited understanding for in vivo targeting mechanisms. Dynamic in vivo phenomena such as NPs’ real-time targeting kinetics and phagocytes’ contribution to active NP targeting remain largely unexplored. To better understand in vivo targeting, monitoring NP accumulation and distribution at complementary levels of spatial and temporal resolution is imperative. Here, we integrate in vivo positron emission tomography/computed tomography imaging with intravital microscopy and flow cytometric analyses to study αvβ3-integrin-targeted cyclic arginine-glycine-aspartate decorated liposomes and oil-in-water nanoemulsions in tumor mouse models. We observed that ligand-mediated accumulation in cancerous lesions is multifaceted and identified “NP hitchhiking” with phagocytes to contribute considerably to this intricate process. We anticipate that this understanding can facilitate rational improvement of nanomedicine applications and that immune cell–NP interactions can be harnessed to develop clinically viable nanomedicine-based immunotherapies

    Tumor Targeting by αvβ3-Integrin-Specific Lipid Nanoparticles Occurs via Phagocyte Hitchhiking.

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    Although the first nanomedicine was clinically approved more than two decades ago, nanoparticles' (NP) in vivo behavior is complex and the immune system's role in their application remains elusive. At present, only passive-targeting nanoformulations have been clinically approved, while more complicated active-targeting strategies typically fail to advance from the early clinical phase stage. This absence of clinical translation is, among others, due to the very limited understanding for in vivo targeting mechanisms. Dynamic in vivo phenomena such as NPs' real-time targeting kinetics and phagocytes' contribution to active NP targeting remain largely unexplored. To better understand in vivo targeting, monitoring NP accumulation and distribution at complementary levels of spatial and temporal resolution is imperative. Here, we integrate in vivo positron emission tomography/computed tomography imaging with intravital microscopy and flow cytometric analyses to study αvβ3-integrin-targeted cyclic arginine-glycine-aspartate decorated liposomes and oil-in-water nanoemulsions in tumor mouse models. We observed that ligand-mediated accumulation in cancerous lesions is multifaceted and identified "NP hitchhiking" with phagocytes to contribute considerably to this intricate process. We anticipate that this understanding can facilitate rational improvement of nanomedicine applications and that immune cell-NP interactions can be harnessed to develop clinically viable nanomedicine-based immunotherapies.This work was supported by the Central Norway Regional Health Authority ‘Helse Midt-Norge’ [AMS: PhD stipend (90062100) and travel grant (90284100); SH: researcher grant (90262100)], the National Institutes of Health (WJMM: R01 CA220234, TR: P30 CA00574), the American Heart Association (CPM: 16SDG31390007), the Norwegian Research Council (SH: 230788/F20), and the Tromsø Research Foundation and Trond Mohn Foundation (SH: 180 °N project).S
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