Literature DB >> 26118906

The Anthelmintic Drug Niclosamide Inhibits the Proliferative Activity of Human Osteosarcoma Cells by Targeting Multiple Signal Pathways.

Zhan Liao, Guoxin Nan, Zhengjian Yan, Liyi Zeng, Youlin Deng, Jixing Ye, Zhonglin Zhang, Min Qiao, Ruifang Li, Sahitya Denduluri, Jing Wang, Qiang Wei, Nisha Geng, Lianggong Zhao, Shun Lu, Xin Wang, Guolin Zhou, Hue H Luu, Rex C Haydon, Tong-Chuan He1, Zhongliang Wang.   

Abstract

Osteosarcoma (OS) is the most common primary malignant tumor of bone with a high propensity for lung metastasis. Despite significant advances in surgical techniques and chemotherapeutic regimens over the past few decades, there has been minimal improvement in OS patient survival. There is an urgent need to identify novel antitumor agents to treat human OS. Repurposing the clinically-used drugs represents a rapid and effective approach to the development of new anticancer agents. The anthelmintic drug niclosamide has recently been identified as a potential anticancer agent in human cancers. Here, we investigate if niclosamide can be developed as an anti-OS drug. We find that niclosamide can effectively inhibit OS cell proliferation and survival at low micromolar concentrations. Cell migration and wounding closure are significantly inhibited by niclosamide. Niclosamide induces cell apoptosis and inhibits cell cycle progression in OS cells. Analysis of niclosamide's effect on 11 cancer-related signal pathway reporters reveals that three of them, the E2F1, AP1, and c-Myc-responsive reporters, are significantly inhibited. To a lesser extent, the HIF1α, TCF/LEF, CREB, NFκB, Smad/TGFβ, and Rbpj/Notch pathway reporters are also inhibited, while the NFAT and Wnt/β-catenin reporters are not significantly affected by niclosamide treatment. We demonstrate that the expression of c-Fos, c-Jun. E2F1, and c-Myc in OS cells is effectively inhibited by niclosamide. Furthermore, niclosamide is shown to effectively inhibit tumor growth in a mouse xenograft tumor model of human osteosarcoma cells. Taken together, these results strongly suggest that niclosamide may exert its anticancer activity in OS cells by targeting multiple signaling pathways. Future investigations should be directed to exploring the antitumor activity in clinically relevant OS models and ultimately in clinical trials.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26118906     DOI: 10.2174/1568009615666150629132157

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Cancer Drug Targets        ISSN: 1568-0096            Impact factor:   3.428


  31 in total

1.  Low-dose paclitaxel downregulates MYC proto-oncogene bHLH transcription factor expression in colorectal carcinoma cells.

Authors:  Wenjing Li; Wanyun Zhu; Chaoxiang Lv; Hao Qu; Kaixiang Xu; Honghui Li; Haifeng Li; Yiming Du; Guangming Liu; Yunyue Wang; Hong-Jiang Wei; Hong-Ye Zhao
Journal:  Oncol Lett       Date:  2017-12-05       Impact factor: 2.967

2.  Bone morphogenetic protein 9 (BMP9) induces effective bone formation from reversibly immortalized multipotent adipose-derived (iMAD) mesenchymal stem cells.

Authors:  Shun Lu; Jing Wang; Jixing Ye; Yulong Zou; Yunxiao Zhu; Qiang Wei; Xin Wang; Shengli Tang; Hao Liu; Jiaming Fan; Fugui Zhang; Evan M Farina; Maryam M Mohammed; Dongzhe Song; Junyi Liao; Jiayi Huang; Dan Guo; Minpeng Lu; Feng Liu; Jianxiang Liu; Li Li; Chao Ma; Xue Hu; Michael J Lee; Russell R Reid; Guillermo A Ameer; Dongsheng Zhou; Tongchuan He
Journal:  Am J Transl Res       Date:  2016-09-15       Impact factor: 4.060

3.  Reversibly immortalized human umbilical cord-derived mesenchymal stem cells (UC-MSCs) are responsive to BMP9-induced osteogenic and adipogenic differentiation.

Authors:  Yi Shu; Chao Yang; Xiaojuan Ji; Linghuan Zhang; Yang Bi; Ke Yang; Mengjia Gong; Xing Liu; Qi Guo; Yuxi Su; Xiangyang Qu; Guoxin Nan; Chen Zhao; Zongyue Zeng; Xinyi Yu; Ruyi Zhang; Shujuan Yan; Jiayan Lei; Ke Wu; Ying Wu; Liping An; Shifeng Huang; Cheng Gong; Chengfu Yuan; Wei Liu; Bo Huang; Yixiao Feng; Bo Zhang; Zhengyu Dai; Yi Shen; Wenping Luo; Xi Wang; Rex C Haydon; Hue H Luu; Russell R Reid; Jennifer Moriatis Wolf; Michael J Lee; Tong-Chuan He; Yasha Li
Journal:  J Cell Biochem       Date:  2018-08-04       Impact factor: 4.429

4.  Effect of mitochondrial uncouplers niclosamide ethanolamine (NEN) and oxyclozanide on hepatic metastasis of colon cancer.

Authors:  Amer Alasadi; Michael Chen; G V T Swapna; Hanlin Tao; Jingjing Guo; Juan Collantes; Noor Fadhil; Gaetano T Montelione; Shengkan Jin
Journal:  Cell Death Dis       Date:  2018-02-13       Impact factor: 8.469

5.  Noncanonical Wnt signaling plays an important role in modulating canonical Wnt-regulated stemness, proliferation and terminal differentiation of hepatic progenitors.

Authors:  Jiaming Fan; Qiang Wei; Junyi Liao; Yulong Zou; Dongzhe Song; Dongmei Xiong; Chao Ma; Xue Hu; Xiangyang Qu; Liqun Chen; Li Li; Yichun Yu; Xinyi Yu; Zhicai Zhang; Chen Zhao; Zongyue Zeng; Ruyi Zhang; Shujuan Yan; Tingting Wu; Xingye Wu; Yi Shu; Jiayan Lei; Yasha Li; Wenwen Zhang; Rex C Haydon; Hue H Luu; Ailong Huang; Tong-Chuan He; Hua Tang
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2017-04-18

6.  The Prodomain-Containing BMP9 Produced from a Stable Line Effectively Regulates the Differentiation of Mesenchymal Stem Cells.

Authors:  Ruifang Li; Zhengjian Yan; Jixing Ye; He Huang; Zhongliang Wang; Qiang Wei; Jing Wang; Lianggong Zhao; Shun Lu; Xin Wang; Shengli Tang; Jiaming Fan; Fugui Zhang; Yulong Zou; Dongzhe Song; Junyi Liao; Minpeng Lu; Feng Liu; Lewis L Shi; Aravind Athiviraham; Michael J Lee; Tong-Chuan He; Zhonglin Zhang
Journal:  Int J Med Sci       Date:  2016-01-01       Impact factor: 3.738

7.  Antibiotic monensin synergizes with EGFR inhibitors and oxaliplatin to suppress the proliferation of human ovarian cancer cells.

Authors:  Youlin Deng; Junhui Zhang; Zhongliang Wang; Zhengjian Yan; Min Qiao; Jixing Ye; Qiang Wei; Jing Wang; Xin Wang; Lianggong Zhao; Shun Lu; Shengli Tang; Maryam K Mohammed; Hao Liu; Jiaming Fan; Fugui Zhang; Yulong Zou; Junyi Liao; Hongbo Qi; Rex C Haydon; Hue H Luu; Tong-Chuan He; Liangdan Tang
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2015-12-07       Impact factor: 4.379

Review 8.  S100A4 in Cancer Metastasis: Wnt Signaling-Driven Interventions for Metastasis Restriction.

Authors:  Mathias Dahlmann; Dennis Kobelt; Wolfgang Walther; Giridhar Mudduluru; Ulrike Stein
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2016-06-20       Impact factor: 6.639

9.  The evolving roles of canonical WNT signaling in stem cells and tumorigenesis: implications in targeted cancer therapies.

Authors:  Ke Yang; Xin Wang; Hongmei Zhang; Zhongliang Wang; Guoxin Nan; Yasha Li; Fugui Zhang; Maryam K Mohammed; Rex C Haydon; Hue H Luu; Yang Bi; Tong-Chuan He
Journal:  Lab Invest       Date:  2015-11-30       Impact factor: 5.662

10.  lncRNA H19 mediates BMP9-induced osteogenic differentiation of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) through Notch signaling.

Authors:  Junyi Liao; Xinyi Yu; Xue Hu; Jiaming Fan; Jing Wang; Zhicai Zhang; Chen Zhao; Zongyue Zeng; Yi Shu; Ruyi Zhang; Shujuan Yan; Yasha Li; Wenwen Zhang; Jing Cui; Chao Ma; Li Li; Yichun Yu; Tingting Wu; Xingye Wu; Jiayan Lei; Jia Wang; Chao Yang; Ke Wu; Ying Wu; Jun Tang; Bai-Cheng He; Zhong-Liang Deng; Hue H Luu; Rex C Haydon; Russell R Reid; Michael J Lee; Jennifer Moriatis Wolf; Wei Huang; Tong-Chuan He
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2017-06-27
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