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IKKβ targeting reduces KRAS-induced lung cancer angiogenesis in vitro and in vivo: A potential anti-angiogenic therapeutic target.

Authors :
Carneiro-Lobo, Tatiana Correa
Scalabrini, Luiza Coimbra
Magalhães, Leila da Silva
Cardeal, Laura B.
Rodrigues, Felipe Silva
dos Santos, Edmilson Ozorio
Baldwin, Albert S.
Levantini, Elena
Giordano, Ricardo J.
Bassères, Daniela Sanchez
Source :
Lung Cancer (01695002). Apr2019, Vol. 130, p169-178. 10p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Highlights • IKKβ promotes KRAS-induced proangiogenic IL-8 and VEGF expression and secretion. • IKKβ promotes KRAS-induced endothelial cell migration, invasion and tube formation. • IKKβ targeting reduces KRAS-mutant lung tumor growth and angiogenesis. • IKKβ targeting reduces pathological angiogenesis in a cancer-independent model. Abstract Objectives The ability of tumor cells to drive angiogenesis is an important cancer hallmark that positively correlates with metastatic potential and poor prognosis. Therefore, targeting angiogenesis is a rational therapeutic approach and dissecting proangiogenic pathways is important, particularly for malignancies driven by oncogenic KRAS, which are widespread and lack effective targeted therapies. Based on published studies showing that oncogenic RAS promotes angiogenesis by upregulating the proangiogenic NF-κB target genes IL-8 and VEGF, that NF-κB activation by KRAS requires the IKKβ kinase, and that targeting IKKβ reduces KRAS-induced lung tumor growth in vivo , but has limited effects on cell growth in vitro , we hypothesized that IKKβ targeting would reduce lung tumor growth by inhibiting KRAS-induced angiogenesis. Materials and methods To test this hypothesis, we targeted IKKβ in KRAS-mutant lung cancer cell lines either by siRNA-mediated transfection or by treatment with Compound A (CmpdA), a highly specific IKKβ inhibitor, and used in vitro and in vivo assays to evaluate angiogenesis. Results and conclusions Both pharmacological and siRNA-mediated IKKβ targeting in lung cells reduced expression and secretion of NF-κB-regulated proangiogenic factors IL-8 and VEGF. Moreover, conditioned media from IKKβ-targeted lung cells reduced human umbilical vein endothelial cell (HUVEC) migration, invasion and tube formation in vitro. Furthermore, siRNA-mediated IKKβ inhibition reduced xenograft tumor growth and vascularity in vivo. Finally, IKKβ inhibition also affects endothelial cell function in a cancer-independent manner, as IKKβ inhibition reduced pathological retinal angiogenesis in a mouse model of oxygen-induced retinopathy. Taken together, these results provide a novel mechanistic understanding of how the IKKβ pathway affects human lung tumorigenesis, indicating that IKKβ promotes KRAS-induced angiogenesis both by cancer cell-intrinsic and cancer cell-independent mechanisms, which strongly suggests IKKβ inhibition as a promising antiangiogenic approach to be explored for KRAS-induced lung cancer therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01695002
Volume :
130
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Lung Cancer (01695002)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
135376407
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lungcan.2019.02.027