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Infliximab, a Monoclonal Antibody against TNF-α, Inhibits NF-κB Activation, Autotaxin Expression and Breast Cancer Metastasis to Lungs.

Anjali ShindeXiaoyun TangRajesh SinghDavid N Brindley
Published in: Cancers (2023)
An inflammatory milieu in the tumor microenvironment leads to immune evasion, resistance to cell death, metastasis and poor prognosis in breast cancer patients. TNF-α is a proinflammatory cytokine that regulates multiple aspects of tumor biology from initiation to progression. TNF-α-induced NF-κB activation initiates inflammatory pathways, which determine cell survival, death and tumor progression. One candidate pathway involves the increased secretion of autotaxin, which produces lysophosphatidate that signals through six G-protein-coupled receptors. Significantly, autotaxin is one of the 40-50 most upregulated genes in metastatic tumors. In this study, we investigated the effects of TNF-α by blocking its action with a monoclonal antibody, Infliximab, and studied the effects on autotaxin secretion and tumor progression. Infliximab had little effect on tumor growth, but it decreased lung metastasis by 60% in a syngeneic BALB/c mouse model using 4T1 breast cancer cells. Infliximab-treated mice also showed a decrease in proliferation and metastatic markers like Ki-67 and vimentin in tumors. This was accompanied by decreases in NF-κB activation, autotaxin expression and the concentrations of plasma and tumor cytokines/chemokines which are involved in metastasis. We also demonstrated a positive correlation of TNF-α -NF-κB and ATX expression in breast cancer patients using cancer databases. Studies in vitro showed that TNF-α-induced NF-κB activation increases autotaxin expression and the clone forming ability of 4T1 breast cancer cells. This report highlights the potential role of Infliximab as an additional approach to attenuate signaling through the autotaxin-lysophosphatidate-inflammatory cycle and decrease mortality from metastatic cancer.
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