A High-Content Screen Identifies Drugs That Restrict Tumor Cell Extravasation across the Endothelial Barrier.
Georg HilfenhausAna MompeónJonathan FreshmanDivya P PrajapatiGloria HernandezVanessa Morais FreitasFeiyang MaAdam D LangenbacherSnezana MirkovDana SongByoung-Kyu ChoYoung Ah GooMatteo PellegriniJau-Nian ChenRobert DamoiseauxM Luisa Iruela-ArispePublished in: Cancer research (2020)
Metastases largely rely on hematogenous dissemination of tumor cells via the vascular system and significantly limit prognosis of patients with solid tumors. To colonize distant sites, circulating tumor cells must destabilize the endothelial barrier and transmigrate across the vessel wall. Here we performed a high-content screen to identify drugs that block tumor cell extravasation by testing 3,520 compounds on a transendothelial invasion coculture assay. Hits were further characterized and validated using a series of in vitro assays, a zebrafish model enabling three-dimensional (3D) visualization of tumor cell extravasation, and mouse models of lung metastasis. The initial screen advanced 38 compounds as potential hits, of which, four compounds enhanced endothelial barrier stability while concurrently suppressing tumor cell motility. Two compounds niclosamide and forskolin significantly reduced tumor cell extravasation in zebrafish, and niclosamide drastically impaired metastasis in mice. Because niclosamide had not previously been linked with effects on barrier function, single-cell RNA sequencing uncovered mechanistic effects of the drug on both tumor and endothelial cells. Importantly, niclosamide affected homotypic and heterotypic signaling critical to intercellular junctions, cell-matrix interactions, and cytoskeletal regulation. Proteomic analysis indicated that niclosamide-treated mice also showed reduced levels of kininogen, the precursor to the permeability mediator bradykinin. Our findings designate niclosamide as an effective drug that restricts tumor cell extravasation through modulation of signaling pathways, chemokines, and tumor-endothelial cell interactions. SIGNIFICANCE: A high-content screen identified niclosamide as an effective drug that restricts tumor cell extravasation by enhancing endothelial barrier stability through modulation of molecular signaling, chemokines, and tumor-endothelial cell interactions. GRAPHICAL ABSTRACT: http://cancerres.aacrjournals.org/content/canres/81/3/619/F1.large.jpg.
Keyphrases
- single cell
- endothelial cells
- high throughput
- cell therapy
- rna seq
- circulating tumor cells
- signaling pathway
- stem cells
- emergency department
- gene expression
- mesenchymal stem cells
- dna methylation
- high glucose
- escherichia coli
- mouse model
- cell proliferation
- insulin resistance
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- oxidative stress
- cystic fibrosis
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- drug induced
- adverse drug
- single molecule
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- cell free
- candida albicans