| Literature DB >> 26053182 |
Annelies Gonnissen1, Sofie Isebaert1, Karin Haustermans1,2.
Abstract
An essential role for Hedgehog (Hh) signaling in human cancer has been established beyond doubt. At present, targeting Hh signaling has mainly been investigated with SMO inhibitors. Unfortunately, resistance against currently used SMO inhibitors has already been observed in basal cell carcinoma (BCC) patients. Therefore, the use of Hh inhibitors targeting the signaling cascade more downstream of SMO could represent a more promising strategy. Furthermore, besides the classical canonical way of Hh signaling activation, non-canonical activation of the GLI transcription factors by multiple important signaling pathways (e.g. MAPK, PI3K, TGFβ) has also been described, pinpointing the importance of targeting the transcription factors GLI1/2. The most promising agent in this context is probably the GLI1/2 inhibitor GANT61 which has been investigated preclinically in numerous tumor types in the last few years. In this review, the emerging role of Hh signaling in cancer is critically evaluated focusing on the potential of targeting Hh signaling more downstream of SMO, i.e. at the level of the GLI transcription factors. Furthermore, the working mechanism and therapeutic potential of the most extensively studied GLI inhibitor in human cancer, i.e. GANT61, is discussed in detail. In conclusion, GANT61 appears to be highly effective against human cancer cells and in xenograft mouse models, targeting almost all of the classical hallmarks of cancer and could hence represent a promising treatment option for human cancer.Entities:
Keywords: DNA repair; GANT61; GLI transcription factors; Hedgehog pathway; apoptosis
Mesh:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26053182 PMCID: PMC4546439 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.4224
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1Targeting Hh signaling at the level of the GLI transcription factors
GLI inhibition can occur at different levels in the activation process of GLI transcriptional output: 1a. Increased proteosomal processing of GLI2 into repressor form or GLI1 degradation with HPI-1 or IMQ. 1b. Inhibition of GLI processing into its activator form by HPI-2/3, 1c. Inhibition of ciliogenesis and therefore processing into the activator form with HPI-4, 1d. Inhibition of GLI2 ciliary accumulation and thus activation of of GLI2 by ATO. 2. Inhibition at the level of GLI-DNA binding through GANT58, GANT61 or GlaB, 3. Through epigenetic silencing with JQ1 or I-BET151 and 4. Through indirect inhibition of non-canonical signaling pathways known to activate the GLI transcription factors. Abbreviations: CKI, casein kinase 1; GANT, Gli-ANTagonist; GlaB, Glabrescione; GLI, Glioma-associated oncogene homologue; GLI-A, activator form of GLI; GLI-R, repressor form of GLI; GSK3β, glycogen synthase kinase 3β; HPI, Hedgehog Pathway Inhibitor; IMQ, imiquimod; P, phosphate; PKA, protein kinase A; PTCH1, patched 1; SHH, sonic hedgehog; SMO, smoothened; SUFU, suppressor of fused.
Overview of IC50 values of GANT61 in different tumor types
| Tumor type | Cell line | IC50 value | Treatment duration | Assay | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MEF | NIH 3T3 | 5μM | 48h | GLI reporter assay | 58 |
| Colon | HT29 | 5-15μM | 72h | Clonogenic assay | 81 |
| Neuroblastoma | SK-N-AS | 5,28-12,4μM | 72h | Fluorometric microculturecytotoxicity assay (FMCA) | 67 |
| Cervix | HaCaT | 5-10μM | 48h | BrdU ELISA kit | 94 |
| Myeloid leukemia | Kasumi-1 | <10μM – 75μM | 48h | WST assay | 107 |
| Pancreas | Primary tumor | 10μM/5μM | 48h/72h | XTT assay | 68 |
| Lung | NCI-520 | 5-10μM | 96h | ApoLive-Glo Multiplex assay | 79 |
| Pleural mesothelium | H2452 | 2.5-10μM | 96h | MTT assay | 65 |
| Biliary tract | GBC | <10μM | 72h | Resazurin test | 35 |
| Rhabdomyosarcoma | RH30 | 100-250μM | 24h | MTT assay | 77 |
Figure 2Schematic overview of different GANT61 target sites
Inhibition of the GLI transcription factors with GANT61 targets many of the “classical hallmarks of cancer”, such as cell viability, proliferation, apoptosis, DNA damage repair, epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT), autophagy, cancer stem cells and immune response.
Overview of GANT61 treatment in animal models
| Tumor type | Animal model | Dose | Formulation | Treatment duration | Efficacy | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prostate | 22Rv1 xenograft | 50mg/kg | Every other day | 16 days | Tumor regression until no tumor palpable | |
| Neuroblastoma | SK-N-AS xenograft | 50mg/kg | Daily | 12 days | Tumor growth reduction (63% of control) | |
| Pancreas | Pancreatic CSC xenograft | 40mg/kg | 3 times/week | 6 weeks | CSC tumor growth inhibition | |
| Hepatocellular | Huh7 xenograft | 50mg/kg | Every other day | 4 weeks | Tumor growth reduction | |
| Lung | NCI-H520, NCI-H2170 and NCI-H226 xenograft | 50mg/kg | Every other day | 20 days | Tumor growth reduction | |
| Rhabdomysarcoma | RD, RH30 xenograft | 50mg/kg | 3 times/week | Until tumor size control mice >1cm3 | Tumor growth reduction (53% in RD and 47% in RH30 cells compared to control) | |
| Embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma | CCA, Rh36 and A673 cells introduced in | 10μM /30μM | Pre-mixture of cells with GANT61 | 7 days | Decreased tumor volume |