Phosphoproteome profiling provides insight into the mechanism of action for carvedilol-mediated cancer prevention.
Kristan H ClevelandSteven YeungKevin M HuangSherry LiangBradley T AndresenYing HuangPublished in: Molecular carcinogenesis (2018)
Recent studies suggest that the β-blocker drug carvedilol prevents skin carcinogenesis but the mechanism is unknown. Carvedilol is one of a few β-blockers identified as biased agonist based on an ability to promote β-arrestin-mediated processes such as ERK phosphorylation. To understand the role of phosphoproteomic signaling in carvedilol's anticancer activity, the mouse epidermal JB6 P+ cells treated with EGF, carvedilol, or their combination were analyzed using the Phospho Explorer Antibody Array containing 1318 site-specific and phospho-specific antibodies of over 30 signaling pathways. The array data indicated that both EGF and carvedilol increased phosphorylation of ERK's cytosolic target P70S6 K while its nuclear target ELK-1 were activated only by EGF; Furthermore, EGF-induced phosphorylation of ELK-1 and c-Jun was attenuated by carvedilol. Subcellular fractionation analysis indicated that ERK nuclear translocation induced by EGF was blocked by co-treatment with carvedilol. Western blot and luciferase reporter assays confirmed that the biased β-blockers carvedilol and alprenolol blocked EGF-induced phosphorylation and activation of c-Jun/AP-1 and ELK-1. Consistently, both carvedilol and alprenolol strongly prevented EGF-induced neoplastic transformation of JB6 P+ cells. Remarkably, oral carvedilol treatment significantly inhibited the growth of A375 melanoma xenograft in SCID mice. As nuclear translocation of ERK is a key step in carcinogenesis, inhibition of this event is proposed as a novel anticancer mechanism for biased β-blockers such as carvedilol.
Keyphrases
- signaling pathway
- growth factor
- induced apoptosis
- pi k akt
- cell proliferation
- high glucose
- angiotensin converting enzyme
- cell cycle arrest
- high resolution
- machine learning
- emergency department
- squamous cell carcinoma
- drug induced
- electronic health record
- protein kinase
- diabetic rats
- adipose tissue
- crispr cas
- cell death
- big data
- young adults
- papillary thyroid
- angiotensin ii
- lymph node metastasis
- squamous cell
- skeletal muscle
- adverse drug