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Osteosarcoma-enriched transcripts paradoxically generate osteosarcoma-suppressing extracellular proteins.

Kexin LiQingji HuoNathan H DimmittGuofan QuJunjie BaoPankita H PandyaM Reza SaadatzadehKhadijeh Bijangi-VishehsaraeiIzath Nizeet AguilarKaren E PollokChien-Chi LinBai-Yan LiHiroki Yokota
Published in: eLife (2023)
Osteosarcoma (OS) is the common primary bone cancer that affects mostly children and young adults. To augment the standard-of-care chemotherapy, we examined the possibility of protein-based therapy using mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs)-derived proteomes and OS-elevated proteins. While a conditioned medium (CM), collected from MSCs, did not present tumor-suppressing ability, the activation of PKA converted MSCs into induced tumor-suppressing cells (iTSCs). In a mouse model, the direct and hydrogel-assisted administration of CM inhibited tumor-induced bone destruction, and its effect was additive with cisplatin. CM was enriched with proteins such as calreticulin, which acted as an extracellular tumor suppressor by interacting with CD47. Notably, the level of CALR transcripts was elevated in OS tissues, together with other tumor-suppressing proteins, including histone H4, and PCOLCE. PCOLCE acted as an extracellular tumor-suppressing protein by interacting with amyloid precursor protein, a prognostic OS marker with poor survival. The results supported the possibility of employing a paradoxical strategy of utilizing OS transcriptomes for the treatment of OS.
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