From Science Daily website (see original article).
ScienceDaily (Nov. 26, 2012) — Researchers at The
University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center have tracked down a
cancer-promoting protein's pathway into the cell nucleus and discovered
how, once there, it fires up a glucose metabolism pathway on which brain
tumors thrive.
They also found a vital spot along the
protein's journey that can be attacked with a type of drug not yet
deployed against glioblastoma multiforme, the most common and lethal
form of brain cancer. Published online by Nature Cell Biology, the paper further illuminates the importance of pyruvate kinase M2 (PKM2) in cancer development and progression.
"PKM2
is very active during infancy, when you want rapid cell growth, and
eventually it turns off. Tumor cells turn PKM2 back on -- it's
overexpressed in many types of cancer," said Zhimin Lu, M.D., Ph.D., the
paper's senior author and an associate professor in MD Anderson's
Department of Neuro-Oncology.
Lu and colleagues showed earlier
this year that PKM2 in the nucleus also activates a variety of genes
involved in cell division. The latest paper shows how it triggers
aerobic glycolysis, processing glucose into energy, also known as the
Warburg effect, upon which many types of solid tumors rely to survive
and grow.
"PKM2 must get to the nucleus to activate genes involved
in cell proliferation and the Warburg effect," Lu said. "If we can keep
it out of the nucleus, we can block both of those cancer-promoting
pathways. PKM2 could be an Achilles' heel for cancer."
By
pinpointing the complicated steps necessary for PKM2 to penetrate the
nucleus, Lu and colleagues found a potentially druggable target that
could keep the protein locked in the cell's cytoplasm.
MEK, ERK emerge as targets
The process begins when the epidermal growth factor connects to its receptor on the cell surface.
This leads to:
* Activation of the MEK protein, which in turn activates ERK.
* ERK sticking a phosphate group to a specific spot on PKM2.
*
Phosphorylation priming PKM2 for a series of steps that culminate in
its binding to the protein importin, which lives up to its name by
taking PKM2 through the nuclear membrane.
Once in the nucleus, the
team showed that PKM2 activates two genes crucial to aerobic glycolysis
and another that splices PKM RNA to make even more PKM2.
An
experiment applying several kinase-inhibiting drugs to human
glioblastoma cell lines showed that only a MEK/ERK inhibitor prevented
EGF-induced smuggling of PKM2 into the nucleus. ERK activation then is
mandatory for PKM2 to get into the nucleus.
"MEK/ERK inhibitors
have not been tried yet in glioblastoma multiforme," Lu said.
Phosporylated PKM2 is a potential biomarker to identify patients who are
candidates for MEK/ERK inhibitors once those drugs are developed.
MEK inhibitor blocks tumor growth
The
researchers also found that the two glycolysis genes activated by PKM2,
called GLUT1 and LDHA, are required for glucose consumption and
conversion of pyruvate to lactate, crucial factors in the Warburg
Effect. Depleting PKM2 in tumor cell lines reduced glucose consumption
and lactate production.
In mice, depleting PKM2 blocked the growth
of brain tumors. Re-expressing the wild type protein caused tumors to
grow. However, re-expression of a PKM2 mutant protein that lost its
ability to get into the nucleus failed to promote tumor formation.
Experiments in human glioblastoma cell lines showed the same effect.
Injecting
the MEK inhibitor selumetinib into tumors inhibited tumor growth,
reduced ERK phosphorylation, PKM2 expression and lactate production in
mice. In 48 human tumor samples, the team found that activity of EGFR,
ERK1/2 and PKM2 were strongly correlated.
Cause of PKM2 overexpression
Lu
and colleagues also published a paper in Molecular Cell that revealed a
mechanism for overexpression of PKM2 in glioblastoma. They found that
EGF receptor activation turns on NF-KB, which leads to a series of
events culminating in PKM2 gene activation.
PKM2 levels were
measured in tumor samples from 55 glioblastoma patients treated with
standard of care surgery, radiation and chemotherapy. The 20 with low
PKM2 expression had a median survival of 34.5 months, compared to 13.6
months for the 35 patients with high levels of PKM2.
Level of PKM2 expression in 27 low-grade astrocytomas was about half of the expression found in higher grade glioblastomas.
"In
these two papers, we show how PKM2 is overexpressed in tumors, how it
gets into the nucleus, that nuclear entry is essential to tumor
development, and identified potential drugs and a biomarker that could
usefully treat people," Lu said.
Co-authors of the Nature Cell Biology paper
are first author Weiwei Yang, Ph.D., Yanhua Zheng, Ph.D., Yan Xia,
Ph.D., and Haitao Ji, Ph.D., of MD Anderson's Department of
Neuro-Oncology and Brain Tumor Center; Xiaomin Chen, Ph.D., of MD
Anderson's Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology; Ken Aldape,
M.D., MD Anderson's Department of Pathology; Fang Guo, Ph.D.,
Nanomedicine Center, Shanghai Research Institute, China Academy of
Science; Costas Lyssiotis, Ph.D., and Lewis Cantley, Ph.D., Beth Israel
Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School.
This research
was funded by grants from the National Institutes of Health (numbers
2RO1CA109035, RO1GM068566 and RO1GM56302), MD Anderson's Cancer Center
Support Grant (CA16672) from the National Cancer Institute; and a
research grant from the Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of
Texas.
Nessun commento:
Posta un commento