| Literature DB >> 28515477 |
Kristine Pettersen1,2, Sonja Andersen2, Simone Degen3, Valentina Tadini3, Joël Grosjean3, Shinji Hatakeyama3, Almaz N Tesfahun1,4, Siver Moestue5, Jana Kim5, Unni Nonstad2, Pål R Romundstad6, Frank Skorpen4,7, Sveinung Sørhaug5,8, Tore Amundsen5,8, Bjørn H Grønberg9,10, Florian Strasser11, Nathan Stephens12, Dag Hoem13, Anders Molven14, Stein Kaasa7,9, Kenneth Fearon7,12, Carsten Jacobi15, Geir Bjørkøy16,17.
Abstract
The majority of cancer patients with advanced disease experience weight loss, including loss of lean body mass. Severe weight loss is characteristic for cancer cachexia, a condition that significantly impairs functional status and survival. The underlying causes of cachexia are incompletely understood, and currently no therapeutic approach can completely reverse the condition. Autophagy coordinates lysosomal destruction of cytosolic constituents and is systemically induced by starvation. We hypothesized that starvation-mimicking signaling compounds secreted from tumor cells may cause a systemic acceleration of autophagy during cachexia. We found that IL-6 secreted by tumor cells accelerates autophagy in myotubes when complexed with soluble IL-6 receptor (trans-signaling). In lung cancer patients, were cachexia is prevalent, there was a significant correlation between elevated IL-6 expression in the tumor and poor prognosis of the patients. We found evidence for an autophagy-inducing bioactivity in serum from cancer patients and that this is clearly associated with weight loss. Importantly, the autophagy-inducing bioactivity was reduced by interference with IL-6 trans-signaling. Together, our findings suggest that IL-6 trans-signaling may be targeted in cancer cachexia.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28515477 PMCID: PMC5435723 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-02088-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Blood samples from cancer patients with weight loss harbor autophagy-inducing bioactivity. (a) Autophagy flux in reporter cells exposed to sera from lung cancer patients (n = 79) or healthy controls (n = 148) (Student t-test). (b) Weight loss (% loss during 3 months prior to blood sampling) in lung cancer patients and autophagy-inducing activity in their sera, measured using an autophagy reporter cells system. (c) Weight loss (% loss during 6 months prior to blood sampling) in GI cancer patients and autophagy-inducing activity in their plasma, measured using an autophagy reporter cells system. (d,e) As in (b), but divided by gender.
Figure 2TOV21G cancer cells cause cachexia and secrete autophagy-inducing substances. (a) Screen of various cancer cell lines for the ability to induce autophagy in reporter cells (co-cultures). Mean from one experiment using triplicate wells ± SD. *p = 0.04, **p = 0.02, ***p = 0.008 vs control (Student t-test). (b) Reporter cells co-cultured with increasing percentage of TOV21G cells. Amino acid starvation (HBSS, 16 h) as positive control. Mean from one experiment representative of six experiments using duplicate wells ± SD. (c) Mean relative body weight (at indicated time intervals) of TOV21G tumor-bearing mice (n = 6) and control mice (n = 6) ± SEM. *p < 0.01, **p < 0.005 vs no tumor (Student t-test). (d) Autophagy flux in reporter cells co-cultured with or separated from TOV21G cells using a semi-permeable membrane. Mean from one experiment using duplicate wells ± SD. (e) Autophagy flux in reporter cells after 3 days of exposure to conditioned medium (CM) from TOV21G cells cultured for 1–3 days (n = 1 for 1 day and n > 6 for 3 days). Mean from one representative experiment using duplicate wells ± SD. (f) Protein levels of MAP1LC3B in reporter cells treated with CM from TOV21G cells for 3 days with or without BafA1 (100 nM) for indicated time periods. MAPLC3B-II signal is normalized against β-actin/ACTB. The data are representative for two independent experiments. Image, originating from the same blot, is cropped. (g) Autophagy flux in reporter cells exposed to diluted (1:15 in complete growth medium) or undiluted CM from TOV21G cells. Mean from one representative of three independent experiments using triplicate wells ± SD.
Figure 3IL-6 secreted from TOV21G cells induces autophagy. (a) Bio-Plex assay of TOV21G conditioned medium (CM) (1 and 3 days cultivation). (b) Autophagy flux in reporter cells following 3 days of rIL-6 exposure. Mean from three independent experiments using duplicate wells ± SD. *p < 0.005, **p < 1 × 10−4, ***p < 5 × 10−6 vs control (Student t-test). (c) Degradation rate of GFP-SQSTM1, GFP and GFP-SQSTM1L341A protein in HEK293 cells following rIL-6 (20 ng/ml) exposure. Mean from one representative of three independent experiments using triplicate wells ± SD. *P = 0.01 vs control (Student t-test). (d) MAP1LC3B protein levels in reporter cells treated with rIL-6 (20 ng/ml) and/or BafA1 (100 nM). MAP1LC3B-II signals normalized against β-tubulin/TUBB. Data representative for five independent experiments. (e) As D, but U2OS cells stained for both MAP1LC3B and SQSTM1. Data representative for two independent experiments. Image, originating from the same blot, is cropped. (f) Autophagy flux in reporter cells treated with rIL-6 (20 ng/ml) alone or in combination with tocilizumab (including 30–60 minutes pretreatment, 10 µg/ml). Mean from one representative of three independent experiments using triplicate wells ± SD. *p < 0.005, **p < 0.0005 (Student t-test). (g) Autophagy flux in reporter cells following exposure to TOV21G CM (diluted 1:15 in complete growth medium) w/wo tocilizumab (30–60 minutes pretreatment, 10 µg/ml) or IL-6-specific ab (30–60 minutes pre-incubation of CM, 3 µg/ml). Mean from one representative of three independent experiments using triplicate wells ± SD. *p < 0.05 vs CM, control (Student t-test). (h) IL-6 level in CM from TOV21G cells without (Controls #1 and #2) and with (IL-6 KO #1–3) IL-6 knock down measured by ELISA assay. Mean from three independent experiments using triplicate wells ± SD. *p < 0.005, **p < 0.0005 (Student t-test). I) Relative IL-6 bioactivity in CM from TOV21G cells (diluted 1:2 in fresh growth medium) w/wo IL-6 knock down measured by a B9 cell-based IL-6 bioactivity assay. Mean from three independent experiments using triplicate wells ± SD. *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01 (Student t-test). J) Autophagy flux in reporter cells following exposure to CM (diluted 1:15 in complete growth medium) from TOV21G cells w/wo IL-6 knock down. Mean from three independent experiments using triplicate wells ± SD. NS = not significant, *p < 0.05, **p < 0.005, ***p < 0.0005 (Student t-test).
Figure 4Autophagy-inducing cancer cells cause cachexia in mice. (a) Autophagy flux in reporter cells exposed to conditioned medium from various cancer cell lines. Mean autophagy flux from four experiments using triplicate wells ± SD. Fold change compared to control is indicated. *p < 0.05, **p < 0.005, ***p < 2 × 10−8 vs control (Student t-test). (b) Mean relative body weight (at indicated time intervals) ± SEM of A2058 tumor-bearing mice (n = 10) and no tumor control mice (n = 10). (c) Mean muscle, white adipose tissue (WAT) and organ weight ± SEM of A2058 tumor-bearing mice (n = 10) relative to no tumor control mice (n = 10). *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01 vs no tumor (Student t-test). (d) Cross section of tibialis muscle from control and A2058 tumor-bearing mice. Immunostaining of Fast Twitch (FT) IIa, IIb muscle fibers and laminin as indicated. Scale bar = 100 µm. (e) Mean tibialis muscle FT IIa fiber area in control (n = 3) and A2058 tumor-bearing mice (n = 4). (f) IL-6 ELISA assay of conditioned medium from the indicated cell lines. Mean from three (G361) or four (A2058) independent experiments using triplicate wells ± SD. (g) Autophagy flux in reporter cells following exposure to conditioned medium from the indicated cell lines (diluted 1:15 in complete growth medium) with or without tocilizumab (30–60 minutes pretreatment, 10 µg/ml). Mean from three (A2058) or four (G361) independent experiments using triplicate wells ± SD. *p < 0.05 (Student t-test).
Figure 5IL-6 trans-signaling accelerates autophagy in myotubes. (a) Protein levels of pSTAT3Tyr705 in HEK293 reporter cells treated with rIL-6 (20 ng/ml) or conditioned medium from hyper IL-6-producing CHO cells (0.1%) as indicated. Protein level from one experiment relative to control and normalized against ERK1/2 as indicated. Results are representative of two independent experiments. (b) Autophagy flux in reporter cells following exposure to conditioned medium from hyper IL-6-producing CHO cells (0.1%) and/or sgp130Fc (1 µg/ml) as indicated. Mean from three independent experiments using duplicate (n = 1) or triplicate (n = 2) wells ± SD. NS = not significant (Student t-test). (c) Protein levels of pSTAT3Tyr705 in HEK293 reporter cells treated with rIL-6 (8 ng/ml) alone or in combination with rIL-6 receptor alpha (IL-6R, 50× molar excess relative to IL-6) as indicated. Protein level relative to control and normalized against ERK1/2 as indicated. (d) Autophagy flux in reporter cells following exposure to rIL-6 (8 ng/ml) and rIL-6 receptor alpha (IL-6R, 50× molar excess relative to IL-6) and/or sgp130Fc (1 µg/ml) as indicated. Mean from four (three for sgp130Fc) independent experiments using quadruplicate wells ± SD. NS = not significant (Student t-test). (e) Protein levels of pSTAT3Tyr705 in C2C12 myoblasts treated with rIL-6 (20 ng/ml) or conditioned medium from hyper IL-6-producing CHO cells (0.1%) as indicated. Protein level relative to control and normalized against ERK1/2 as indicated. (f) As E, but with C2C12 myotubes. (g) Protein levels of MAP1LC3B and SQSTM1 in C2C12 myotubes treated with conditioned medium from hyper IL-6-producing CHO cells (0.1%, 3 days) and BafA1 (100 nM) or BafA1 alone for indicated time periods. MAP1LC3B-II and SQSTM1 signals are normalized against PCNA. Graphs illustrates the mean from three independent experiments ± SD. *p < 0.05 (Student t-test).
Figure 6High expression of IL-6 mRNA in tumor tissue predicts poor prognosis of lung cancer patients. (a) High expression of IL-6 in the tumor predicts a worse overall survival of lung cancer patients. (b,c) High expression of IL-6 receptor and IL6ST/gp130, respectively, in the tumor predict prolonged survival of lung cancer patients. HR = hazard ratio. The data are obtained using the kmplot.com database tool[27, 28].