Differentiation-associated urothelial cytochrome P450 oxidoreductase predicates the xenobiotic-metabolizing activity of "luminal" muscle-invasive bladder cancers.
Simon C BakerVolker Manfred ArltRadek IndraMadeleine JoelMarie StiborovaIan EardleyNiaz AhmadWolfgang OttoMaximilian BurgerPeter RubenwolfDavid H PhillipsJennifer SouthgatePublished in: Molecular carcinogenesis (2018)
Extra-hepatic metabolism of xenobiotics by epithelial tissues has evolved as a self-defence mechanism but has potential to contribute to the local activation of carcinogens. Bladder epithelium (urothelium) is bathed in excreted urinary toxicants and pro-carcinogens. This study reveals how differentiation affects cytochrome P450 (CYP) activity and the role of NADPH:P450 oxidoreductase (POR). CYP1A1 and CYP1B1 transcripts were inducible in normal human urothelial (NHU) cells maintained in both undifferentiated and functional barrier-forming differentiated states in vitro. However, ethoxyresorufin O-deethylation (EROD) activity, the generation of reactive BaP metabolites and BaP-DNA adducts, were predominantly detected in differentiated NHU cell cultures. This gain-of-function was attributable to the expression of POR, an essential electron donor for all CYPs, which was significantly upregulated as part of urothelial differentiation. Immunohistology of muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC) revealed significant overall suppression of POR expression. Stratification of MIBC biopsies into "luminal" and "basal" groups, based on GATA3 and cytokeratin 5/6 labeling, showed POR over-expression by a subgroup of the differentiated luminal tumors. In bladder cancer cell lines, CYP1-activity was undetectable/low in basal PORlo T24 and SCaBER cells and higher in the luminal POR over-expressing RT4 and RT112 cells than in differentiated NHU cells, indicating that CYP-function is related to differentiation status in bladder cancers. This study establishes POR as a predictive biomarker of metabolic potential. This has implications in bladder carcinogenesis for the hepatic versus local activation of carcinogens and as a functional predictor of the potential for MIBC to respond to prodrug therapies.
Keyphrases
- induced apoptosis
- cell cycle arrest
- poor prognosis
- spinal cord injury
- urinary tract
- high grade
- randomized controlled trial
- endothelial cells
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- transcription factor
- stem cells
- binding protein
- drug delivery
- ms ms
- signaling pathway
- single cell
- young adults
- cancer therapy
- cell proliferation
- climate change
- bone marrow
- phase iii
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- drug release
- electron microscopy