Therapeutic antibody targeting natriuretic peptide receptor 1 inhibits gastric cancer growth via BCL-2-mediated intrinsic apoptosis.
Masahiro SasaharaMitsuro KandaChie TanakaDai ShimizuShinichi UmedaHideki TakamiYoshikuni InokawaNorifumi HattoriMasamichi HayashiGoro NakayamaYasuhiro KoderaPublished in: International journal of cancer (2023)
Despite recent advances in the development of therapeutic antibodies, the prognosis of unresectable or metastatic gastric cancer (GC) remains poor. Here, we searched for genes involved in the malignant phenotype of GC and investigated the potential of one candidate gene to serve as a novel therapeutic target. Analysis of transcriptome datasets of GC identified natriuretic peptide receptor 1 (NPR1), a plasma membrane protein, as a potential target. We employed a panel of human GC cell lines and gene-specific small interfering RNA-mediated NPR1 silencing to investigate the roles of NPR1 in malignancy-associated functions and intracellular signaling pathways. We generated an anti-NPR1 polyclonal antibody and examined its efficacy in a mouse xenograft model of GC peritoneal dissemination. Associations between NPR1 expression in GC tissue and clinicopathological factors were also evaluated. NPR1 mRNA was significantly upregulated in several GC cell lines compared with normal epithelial cells. NPR1 silencing attenuated GC cell proliferation, invasion, and migration, and additionally induced the intrinsic apoptosis pathway associated with mitochondrial dysfunction and caspase activation via downregulation of BCL-2. Administration of anti-NPR1 antibody significantly reduced the number and volume of GC peritoneal tumors in xenografted mice. High expression of NPR1 mRNA in clinical GC specimens was associated with a significantly higher rate of postoperative recurrence and poorer prognosis. NPR1 regulates the intrinsic apoptosis pathway and plays an important role in promoting the GC malignant phenotype. Inhibition of NPR1 with antibodies may have potential as a novel therapeutic modality for unresectable or metastatic GC.
Keyphrases
- gas chromatography
- cell proliferation
- small cell lung cancer
- cell death
- oxidative stress
- squamous cell carcinoma
- binding protein
- signaling pathway
- endothelial cells
- genome wide
- gene expression
- type diabetes
- mass spectrometry
- locally advanced
- risk assessment
- adipose tissue
- radiation therapy
- copy number
- cell cycle arrest
- long non coding rna
- patients undergoing
- human health
- metabolic syndrome
- transcription factor
- skeletal muscle
- pi k akt
- rectal cancer
- cell cycle
- simultaneous determination
- single cell
- genome wide analysis
- liver metastases