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Targeted Destruction of S100A4 Inhibits Metastasis of Triple Negative Breast Cancer Cells

Authors :
Thamir M. Ismail
Rachel G. Crick
Min Du
Uma Shivkumar
Andrew Carnell
Roger Barraclough
Guozheng Wang
Zhenxing Cheng
Weiping Yu
Angela Platt-Higgins
Gemma Nixon
Philip S. Rudland
Source :
Biomolecules, Vol 13, Iss 7, p 1099 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2023.

Abstract

Most patients who die of cancer do so from its metastasis to other organs. The calcium-binding protein S100A4 can induce cell migration/invasion and metastasis in experimental animals and is overexpressed in most human metastatic cancers. Here, we report that a novel inhibitor of S100A4 can specifically block its increase in cell migration in rat (IC50, 46 µM) and human (56 µM) triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) cells without affecting Western-blotted levels of S100A4. The moderately-weak S100A4-inhibitory compound, US-10113 has been chemically attached to thalidomide to stimulate the proteasomal machinery of a cell. This proteolysis targeting chimera (PROTAC) RGC specifically eliminates S100A4 in the rat (IC50, 8 nM) and human TNBC (IC50, 3.2 nM) cell lines with a near 20,000-fold increase in efficiency over US-10113 at inhibiting cell migration (IC50, 1.6 nM and 3.5 nM, respectively). Knockdown of S100A4 in human TNBC cells abolishes this effect. When PROTAC RGC is injected with mouse TNBC cells into syngeneic Balb/c mice, the incidence of experimental lung metastases or local primary tumour invasion and spontaneous lung metastasis is reduced in the 10–100 nM concentration range (Fisher’s Exact test, p ≤ 0.024). In conclusion, we have established proof of principle that destructive targeting of S100A4 provides the first realistic chemotherapeutic approach to selectively inhibiting metastasis.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2218273X
Volume :
13
Issue :
7
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Biomolecules
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.5674ca5a7a924f4d9350d3e9cbc1b643
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/biom13071099