| Literature DB >> 25628605 |
Paul J Davis1, Gennadi V Glinsky2, Hung-Yun Lin3, John T Leith4, Aleck Hercbergs5, Heng-Yuan Tang6, Osnat Ashur-Fabian7, Sandra Incerpi8, Shaker A Mousa6.
Abstract
Integrin αvβ3 is generously expressed by cancer cells and rapidly dividing endothelial cells. The principal ligands of the integrin are extracellular matrix proteins, but we have described a cell surface small molecule receptor on αvβ3 that specifically binds thyroid hormone and thyroid hormone analogs. From this receptor, thyroid hormone (l-thyroxine, T4; 3,5,3'-triiodo-l-thyronine, T3) and tetraiodothyroacetic acid (tetrac) regulate expression of specific genes by a mechanism that is initiated non-genomically. At the integrin, T4 and T3 at physiological concentrations are pro-angiogenic by multiple mechanisms that include gene expression, and T4 supports tumor cell proliferation. Tetrac blocks the transcriptional activities directed by T4 and T3 at αvβ3, but, independently of T4 and T3, tetrac modulates transcription of cancer cell genes that are important to cell survival pathways, control of the cell cycle, angiogenesis, apoptosis, cell export of chemotherapeutic agents, and repair of double-strand DNA breaks. We have covalently bound tetrac to a 200 nm biodegradable nanoparticle that prohibits cell entry of tetrac and limits its action to the hormone receptor on the extracellular domain of plasma membrane αvβ3. This reformulation has greater potency than unmodified tetrac at the integrin and affects a broader range of cancer-relevant genes. In addition to these actions on intra-cellular kinase-mediated regulation of gene expression, hormone analogs at αvβ3 have additional effects on intra-cellular protein-trafficking (cytosol compartment to nucleus), nucleoprotein phosphorylation, and generation of nuclear coactivator complexes that are relevant to traditional genomic actions of T3. Thus, previously unrecognized cell surface-initiated actions of thyroid hormone and tetrac formulations at αvβ3 offer opportunities to regulate angiogenesis and multiple aspects of cancer cell behavior.Entities:
Keywords: gene transcription; integrin; nanoparticle; tetraiodothyroacetic acid; thyroid hormone
Year: 2015 PMID: 25628605 PMCID: PMC4290672 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2014.00240
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Transcriptional mechanisms by which Nanotetrac/tetrac is anti-angiogenic.
| Angiogenesis-relevant target | Action | References |
|---|---|---|
| bFGF transcription | ↓ | ( |
| VEGFA transcription | ↓ | ( |
| EGFR transcription | ↓ | ( |
| TSP1 (THBS1) transcription | ↑ | ( |
| miR-21 transcription | ↓ | ( |
| miR-15A transcription | ↑ | ( |
| Cellular bFGF abundance | ↓ | ( |
| Cellular Ang-2 abundance | ↓ | ( |
| Cellular MMP-9 abundance | ↓ | ( |
| Pro-angiogenic activity of thyroid hormone | ↓ | ( |
Measurements of gene transcription were made in breast cancer (.
Mechanisms of selected cancer chemotherapeutic actions of Nanotetrac.
| Action | Example | References |
|---|---|---|
| Chemosensitization | Decreased efflux of doxorubicin, P-gp effect; increased effectiveness of other chemotherapeutic agents | ( |
| Radiosensitization | Disordered repair of radiation-induced double-strand DNA breaks; prevention of radiation-induced activation of integrin ávâ3 | ( |
| Disabling of cell survival pathway gene expression | Decreased expression of anti-apoptotic | ( |
| Cell cycle | Downregulation of multiple cyclin, cyclin-dependent protein kinase genes | ( |
| Disordering of growth factor pathways | Suppression of | ( |
| See Table |