6533b7cefe1ef96bd1257090

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Selective targeting of collagen IV in the cancer cell microenvironment reduces tumor burden

Ana DíazIgnacio VenturaIgnacio VenturaAida ArtigotJavier AlcácerFernando RevertNuria RodaEnrique Pérez-payáJuan F. Sanz-cerveraErnesto López-pascualElain Gutierrez-carbonellAlejandra Maria Pérez-sastreJuan SausRoberto Gozalbo-roviraDaniel Ruíz-sanchisRaúl Mínguez BlascoFrancisco Revert-rosJerónimo Forteza

subject

0301 basic medicineTumor microenvironmentChemistryKinaseMesenchymal stem cellEMTPhenotype03 medical and health sciences030104 developmental biologyOncologyGPBPPrecursor cellCancer cellCancer researchmedicinecollagen IVtumor microenvironmentDoxorubicinSecretiondrug-resistant cancermedicine.drugResearch Paper

description

Goodpasture antigen-binding protein (GPBP) is an exportable1 Ser/Thr kinase that induces collagen IV expansion and has been associated with chemoresistance following epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT). Here we demonstrate that cancer EMT phenotypes secrete GPBP (mesenchymal GPBP) which displays a predominant multimeric oligomerization and directs the formation of previously unrecognized mesh collagen IV networks (mesenchymal collagen IV). Yeast two-hybrid (YTH) system was used to identify a 260SHCIE264 motif critical for multimeric GPBP assembly which then facilitated design of a series of potential peptidomimetics. The compound 3-[4''-methoxy-3,2'-dimethyl-(1,1';4',1'')terphenyl-2''-yl]propionic acid, or T12, specifically targets mesenchymal GPBP and disturbs its multimerization without affecting kinase catalytic site. Importantly, T12 reduces growth and metastases of tumors populated by EMT phenotypes. Moreover, low-dose doxorubicin sensitizes epithelial cancer precursor cells to T12, thereby further reducing tumor load. Given that T12 targets the pathogenic mesenchymal GPBP, it does not bind significantly to normal tissues and therapeutic dosing was not associated with toxicity. T12 is a first-in-class drug candidate to treat cancer by selectively targeting the collagen IV of the tumor cell microenvironment.

10.18632/oncotarget.24280http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5834258