BACKGROUND: Na(V)1.5 voltage-gated sodium channels are abnormally expressed in breast tumours and their expression level is associated with metastatic occurrence and patients' death. In breast cancer cells, Na(V)1.5 activity promotes the proteolytic degradation of the extracellular matrix and enhances cell invasiveness. FINDINGS: In this study, we showed that the extinction of Na(V)1.5 expression in human breast cancer cells almost completely abrogated lung colonisation in immunodepressed mice (NMRI nude). Furthermore, we demonstrated that ranolazine (50 μM) inhibited Na(V)1.5 currents in breast cancer cells and reduced Na(V)1.5-related cancer cell invasiveness in vitro. In vivo, the injection of ranolazine (50 mg/kg/day) significantly reduced lung colonisation by Na(V)1.5-expressing human breast cancer cells. CONCLUSIONS: Taken together, our results demonstrate the importance of Na(V)1.5 in the metastatic colonisation of organs by breast cancer cells and indicate that small molecules interfering with Na(V) activity, such as ranolazine, may represent powerful pharmacological tools to inhibit metastatic development and improve cancer treatments.
BACKGROUND:Na(V)1.5 voltage-gated sodium channels are abnormally expressed in breast tumours and their expression level is associated with metastatic occurrence and patients' death. In breast cancer cells, Na(V)1.5 activity promotes the proteolytic degradation of the extracellular matrix and enhances cell invasiveness. FINDINGS: In this study, we showed that the extinction of Na(V)1.5 expression in humanbreast cancer cells almost completely abrogated lung colonisation in immunodepressed mice (NMRI nude). Furthermore, we demonstrated that ranolazine (50 μM) inhibited Na(V)1.5 currents in breast cancer cells and reduced Na(V)1.5-related cancer cell invasiveness in vitro. In vivo, the injection of ranolazine (50 mg/kg/day) significantly reduced lung colonisation by Na(V)1.5-expressing humanbreast cancer cells. CONCLUSIONS: Taken together, our results demonstrate the importance of Na(V)1.5 in the metastatic colonisation of organs by breast cancer cells and indicate that small molecules interfering with Na(V) activity, such as ranolazine, may represent powerful pharmacological tools to inhibit metastatic development and improve cancer treatments.
Breast cancer is the primary cause of death by cancer in women worldwide and patients mostly die because of metastases appearance and development [1] which rely in part on the ability of cancer cells to degrade and migrate through extracellular matrices (ECM). Currently, there is no treatment for specifically inhibiting metastases development. Voltage-gated sodium channels (NaV) are essential for action potential firing and as such are characteristic of excitable cells [2]. However, different NaV isoforms have been found in non-excitable epithelial humancancer biopsies and cells, such as in breast [3, 4], lung [5-7], prostate [8], cervix [9], ovarian [10, 11] and colon cancer [12], and their function, through persistent currents at the membrane potential, enhances degradation of ECM [5, 13–15]. Notably, the NaV1.5 isoform is abnormally expressed in breast cancer biopsies, while it is not in non-cancerous mammary tissues [14], and its level of expression is associated with lymph node invasion, the development of metastases and a reduced survival of patients [3, 16, 17]. In cancer cells, it is expressed as a neonatal splice variant showing a 7-amino acid substitution in the segments S3 and S4 of the domain I (DI-S3-S4) of the protein compared to the adult variant that shows a particular pharmacology [18] and was proposed to serve as a metastatic marker [16]. NaV1.5 is functional at the plasma membrane of highly invasive breast cancer cells [3, 16, 17], and its activity maintains a pro-invasive phenotype [15], related to “mesenchymal migration” [19]. Indeed, while the complete mechanism involved is not yet elucidated, NaV1.5 activity was shown i) to control Src kinase activity, cortactin phosphorylation (Y421) and the subsequent polymerisation of actin filaments, ii) to increase the activity of the Na+/H+ exchanger type 1 (NHE-1), thus enhancing the efflux of protons and the proteolytic activity of extracellularly-released acidic cysteine cathepsins B and S [13, 20]. Altogether, these results indicated that NaV1.5 promotes the invadopodial activity of breast cancer cells and the invasion of the surrounding ECM [15]. Molecules reducing its activity, such as tetrodotoxin, reduce cancer cell invasiveness in vitro[3, 14, 18]. Correlatively, molecules that increase its activity, such as veratridine, enhance ECM invasion [13]. However, to the best of our knowledge, the importance of NaV1.5 expression, and the relevance for its pharmacological inhibition, on the metastatic organ colonisation by breast cancer cells have never been reported so far. Ranolazine is an antiarrhythmic drug indicated for the treatment of chronic angina that was approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in 2006. While it is proposed to have several pharmacological actions, its best characterized one is the selective inhibition of late sodium currents [21]. This leads to a steeper Na+ gradient which, by increasing the activity of the Na+/Ca2+ exchanger (NCX), reduces calcium overload, and improves ventricular relaxation in pathological conditions associated with cardiac ischemia [22].In this study we investigated how NaV1.5 expression in humanbreast cancer cells affected metastatic colonisation of organs in immunodepressed mice, and whether its pharmacological inhibition by ranolazine reduced cancer cell invasiveness both in vitro and in vivo.Highly invasive MDA-MB-231humanbreast cancer cells express mRNA for NaV1.5, NaV1.6 and NaV1.7 channels [16], but only NaV1.5 channels are functional at the plasma membrane and are giving rise to transient inward sodium currents (INa) under voltage-clamp procedures [13] (see Additional file 1: Material and methods). INa-voltage (INa-V) protocols were performed using the whole-cell configuration of the patch clamp technique from MDA-MB-231-Luc cells modified to stably express a null-target small hairpin RNA (shCTL). The INa-V relationship, obtained from a holding potential of −100 mV, indicated a threshold of activation around −60 mV and maximal current of −12.1 ± 2.2 pA/pF at a voltage of −10 mV (Figure 1A). The acute application of ranolazine (50 μM) significantly reduced the maximal amplitude to −8.7 ± 1.7 pA/pF (p < 0.001). This decrease in the maximal current amplitude was associated with a significant leftward shift of the availability-voltage relationship (Figure 1B). The half (1/2)-inactivation voltage was shifted from −84.1 ± 1.4 mV to −90.3 ± 1.7 mV (p < 0.001) in absence and presence of ranolazine, respectively. The activation-voltage relationship was significantly modified (Figure 1C), and the 1/2-activation voltage was shifted from −37.1 ± 1.0 mV to −39.2 ± 0.6 mV (p < 0.01). Therefore, ranolazine reduced efficiently the activity of the neonatal NaV1.5 isoform expressed in humanbreast cancer cells. This isoform is the only one to be functional in breast cancer cells [13, 16] and we selected a population of cells stably expressing a small hairpin RNA targeting its expression (shNaV1.5) after lentiviral transduction. This led to a significant 89 ± 1% decrease of NaV1.5 mRNA expression (Figure 2A), resulting in the complete disappearance of sodium currents in almost all cancer cells (Figure 2B), with no effect on cell viability (Figure 2C). Before assessing the effect of ranolazine in reducing cancer cell invasiveness, we addressed a possible cytotoxic effect of its application. Figure 2D indicates that ranolazine, incubated for 5 days in a range of concentration from 0.1 to 100 μM had no effect on cell viability. It was then used at 50 μM in the 24 h invasion experiment with Matrigel™-coated filters (Figure 2E). In shCTL cells, cell invasiveness was reduced by 35 ± 4% with the total inhibition of NaV1.5 currents with 30 μM tetrodotoxin (TTX), and by 18 ± 3% with ranolazine. In comparison to shCTL cells, shNaV1.5 cancer cells, which do not express NaV1.5, had a reduced invasiveness of 33 ± 10%. In shNaV1.5 cells, both TTX and ranolazine were ineffective to further reduce cell invasiveness, suggesting that ranolazine was specific in inhibiting NaV1.5-related invasion. NaV1.5 expression and activity was recently shown to control the acquisition of a pro-invasive phenotype, by maintaining a spindle-shape morphology and by controlling the ECM proteolysis by MDA-MB-231cancer cells [15]. We found that ranolazine increased the circularity of shCTL cells, thus decreasing the pro-invasive morphology, to the same extent as the complete extinction of NaV1.5 expression (Figure 2F). Furthermore, ranolazine reduced the focal ECM degradative activity of shCTL cells by 58.6 ± 10.0% (Figure 2G). This activity, which is related to the invadopodial activity, was monitored as being the release of fluorescence from DQ-gelatin at focal sites of F-actin polymerisation as previously described [15].
Figure 1
Ranolazine inhibits sodium current in human breast cancer cells. Sodium currents (INa) from MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells stably expressing null target shRNA (shCTL) were studied in voltage-clamp mode with the whole-cell configuration of the patch clamp technique. A, Left, representative INa-voltage traces obtained from one cell before (vehicle) and after 50 μM ranolazine treatment (Rano). Right, mean ± s.e.m. steady-state INa-voltage relationships obtained from cancer cells before and after incubation with 50 μM ranolazine (n = 12 cells) from a holding potential of −100 mV. There is as statistical difference between the two conditions for voltages ranging from −35 to +40 mV (p < 0.001, Wilcoxon test). B, Availability-voltage relationships obtained in presence (red trace) or not (vehicle, black trace) of 50 μM ranolazine. There is a significant leftward shift of the availability-voltage relationship in presence of ranolazine (p < 0.001). The half (1/2)-inactivation voltage was shifted from −84.1 ± 1.4 mV to −90.3 ± 1.7 mV in absence and presence of ranolazine, respectively. C, Activation-voltage relationships obtained in presence (red trace) or not (vehicle, black trace) of 50 μM ranolazine. There is a significant leftward shift of the activation-voltage relationship in presence of ranolazine, and the 1/2-activation voltage was shifted from −37.1 ± 1.0 mV to −39.2 ± 0.6 mV in absence and presence of ranolazine, respectively. (p < 0.01, Wilcoxon test).
Na
1.5 suppression, or ranolazine treatment, inhibit metastatic lung colonisation by breast cancer cells. A, Representative bioluminescent imaging (BLI) measurement performed in the same NMRI nude mouse per condition from week 2 to week 8 after cancer cell injection. Mice were injected with shCTL MDA-MB-231-Luc cells (shCTL), or with shNaV1.5 MDA-MB-231-Luc cells (shNaV1.5) or with shCTL MDA-MB-231-Luc cells and treated (5 days/week) with ranolazine (50 mg/kg) (Rano) or vehicle (shCTL, shNaV1.5). B, Evolution of mice body weight during the experiments in the same conditions than in A. C, Mean in vivo BLI value (expressed in cpm) as a function of time recorded in the whole body of mice coming from the three groups indicated previously (shCTL, n = 18; shNaV1.5, n = 12; Rano, n = 8) (Statistical significance is indicated as: *p <0.05, Kruskal-Wallis analysis followed by Dunn’s test). D, Representative BLI at completion of the study (8th week after cells injection), in whole animals and ex vivo after lung isolation. E, BLI quantification of excised lungs. Box plots indicate the first quartile, the median, and the third quartile, squares indicate the mean (shCTL, n = 18; shNaV1.5, n = 12; Rano, n = 8) (Kruskal-Wallis analysis followed by Dunn’s test).
Na
1.5 suppression, or ranolazine treatment, inhibit metastatic lung colonisation by breast cancer cells. A, Representative bioluminescent imaging (BLI) measurement performed in the same NMRI nude mouse per condition from week 2 to week 8 after cancer cell injection. Mice were injected with shCTL MDA-MB-231-Luc cells (shCTL), or with shNaV1.5 MDA-MB-231-Luc cells (shNaV1.5) or with shCTL MDA-MB-231-Luc cells and treated (5 days/week) with ranolazine (50 mg/kg) (Rano) or vehicle (shCTL, shNaV1.5). B, Evolution of mice body weight during the experiments in the same conditions than in A. C, Mean in vivo BLI value (expressed in cpm) as a function of time recorded in the whole body of mice coming from the three groups indicated previously (shCTL, n = 18; shNaV1.5, n = 12; Rano, n = 8) (Statistical significance is indicated as: *p <0.05, Kruskal-Wallis analysis followed by Dunn’s test). D, Representative BLI at completion of the study (8th week after cells injection), in whole animals and ex vivo after lung isolation. E, BLI quantification of excised lungs. Box plots indicate the first quartile, the median, and the third quartile, squares indicate the mean (shCTL, n = 18; shNaV1.5, n = 12; Rano, n = 8) (Kruskal-Wallis analysis followed by Dunn’s test).While it is now well-established that NaV channels are anomalously expressed in several epithelial tumours and are associated with metastasis occurrence and patient mortality [12, 16, 17, 23], the consequence of their expression on metastatic organ colonisation was not demonstrated so far. To our knowledge, this study is the first to clearly establish a link between NaV1.5 expression in humanbreast cancer cells and the colonisation of lungs in vivo. Furthermore, this study using ranolazine, a drug that is clinically used, shows that the pharmacological inhibition of NaV channels could be effective in reducing metastastic colonisation with no apparent toxic effect. In conclusion, this study opens a new therapeutical concept for the management of cancer disease. Inhibitors of NaV channels, already approved for other clinical use such as antiarrhythmics, anticonvulsants [17] or anaesthetics [24], or new molecules that are even more effective in blocking neonatal variants, could be of high interest in the prevention and/or reduction of metastatic spreading of cancer cells at the diagnosis of the primary tumour.Additional file 1:
Materials and methods.
(DOC 45 KB)Additional file 2: Figure S1: MDA-MB-231-shCTL cells expressing luciferase gene were seeded at different densities then treated for 24h with Ranolazine (50 μM, red circles) or not (black squares). (PDF 11 KB)
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