| Literature DB >> 26380222 |
Abstract
Hyaluronan (HA) has many functions in the extracellular milieu of normal and diseased tissues. Disease-associated HA accumulation has been shown to predict a worsened prognosis in cancer patients, with tumors having a high-extracellular HA content (HA-high) being more aggressive than their HA-low counterparts. HA-high tumor aggressiveness is derived from the specialized biomechanical and molecular properties of the HA-based assembly of HA binding proteins and the growth-promoting factors that accumulate in it. Biophysical characteristics of an HA-high tumor microenvironment include high tumor interstitial pressure, compression of tumor vasculature, and resulting tumor hypoxia. Within the tumor cell membrane, HA receptors, primarily CD44 and RHAMM, anchor the HA-high extracellular network. HA-CD44 association on the tumor cell surface enhances receptor tyrosine kinase activity to drive tumor progression and treatment resistance. Together, malignant cells in this HA-high matrix may evolve dependency on it for growth. This yields the hypothesis that depleting HA in HA-high tumors may be associated with a therapeutic benefit. A pegylated form of recombinant human hyaluronidase PH20 (PEGPH20) has been deployed as a potential cancer therapeutic in HA-high tumors. PEGPH20 can collapse this matrix by degrading the HA-assembled tumor extracellular framework, leading to tumor growth inhibition, preferentially in HA-high tumors. Enzymatic depletion of HA by PEGPH20 results in re-expansion of the tumor vasculature, reduction in tumor hypoxia, and increased penetration of therapeutic molecules into the tumor. Finally, HA-depletion results in reduced signaling via CD44/RHAMM. Taken together, HA-depletion strategies accomplish their antitumor effects by multiple mechanisms that include targeting both biophysical and molecular signaling pathways. Ongoing clinical trials are examining the potential of PEGPH20 in combination with partner therapeutics in several cancers.Entities:
Keywords: PEGPH20; extracellular matrix; hyaluronan; hyaluronidase; interstitial fluid pressure; treatment resistance; tumor microenvironment
Year: 2015 PMID: 26380222 PMCID: PMC4551830 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2015.00192
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1The impact of HA depletion from a tumor with an HA-high phenotype. (A) An HA-high tumor, encompassed by a fibrous capsule. As HA accumulates in the tumor it adsorbs water, resulting in expansion of the tumor stroma, which is limited by the fibrous capsule, resulting in increased tumor interstitial pressure, collapse of tumor-associated vasculature, and other sequelae as shown. (B) After treatment with PEGPH20, high-molecular weight HA is degraded to fragments, which diffuse into newly expanded vasculature, resulting in a dose-dependent normalization of tumor interstitial pressure and other changes, which result in tumor growth inhibition and increased access to systemic therapies. Abbreviations: ECM, extracellular matrix; HA, hyaluronan; PEGPH20, pegylated recombinant human hyaluronidase; pO2, partial pressure of oxygen; VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor. Figure adapted from Ref. (45). Data from Ref. (16, 17, 40–44).
Figure 2Enzymatic HA depletion leads to normalization of tIP and normalization of tumor vasculature. (A) PEGPH20 rapidly normalizes tIP. Dose-dependent effect of PEGPH20 [0 (control), 0.015, 0.15, 1.5, 4.5, 10, and 15 mg/kg] on tumor tIP in HA-high PC3 prostate tumors over a 2-h period following intravenous administration (starting tIP ~40 mm Hg). Abbreviations: HA, hyaluronan; IFP, interstitial fluid pressure; min, minutes; PEGPH20, polyethylene glycol-conjugated (pegylated) human hyaluronidase PH20; tIP, tumor interstitial pressure. Adapted with permission from Thompson et al. (16) (B) PEGPH20 treatment leads to vascular expansion and formation of endothelial fenestrae. Representative fluorescent images of KPC tumor from vehicle-treated (top left panels) and PEGPH20-treated (bottom left panels) mice (n = 4 mice for each cohort). Scanning electron microscopy images of pancreatic blood vessels in KPC (upper two right panels) mice following treatment with either vehicle or PEGPH20 (n = 4 mice for each cohort) reveal endothelial fenestrations (white arrowheads) only in the tumor microvasculature. PEGPH20-treated KPC mice. Endothelia in the healthy pancreata of control PC mice are comparable to the untreated KPC tumor. Abbreviations: HA, hyaluronan; KPC, LSL-Kras+; LSLTrp53+; Pdx-1-Cre; PC, LSL-Trp53+; Pdx-1-Cre; PEGPH20, polyethylene glycol-conjugated (pegylated) recombinant human hyaluronidase PH20. Adapted with permission from Jacobetz et al. (40).