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The hEag1 K + Channel Inhibitor Astemizole Stimulates Ca 2+ Deposition in SaOS-2 and MG-63 Osteosarcoma Cultures.

Beáta MészárosAgota CsotiTibor G SzantoAndrea TelekKatalin KovácsAgnes TothJulianna VolkóGyorgy Panyi
Published in: International journal of molecular sciences (2022)
The hEag1 (Kv10.1) K + channel is normally found in the brain, but it is ectopically expressed in tumor cells, including osteosarcoma. Based on the pivotal role of ion channels in osteogenesis, we tested whether pharmacological modulation of hEag1 may affect osteogenic differentiation of osteosarcoma cell lines. Using molecular biology (RT-PCR), electrophysiology (patch-clamp) and pharmacology (astemizole sensitivity, IC 50 = 0.135 μM) we demonstrated that SaOS-2 osteosarcoma cells also express hEag1 channels. SaOS-2 cells also express to KCa1.1 K + channels as shown by mRNA expression and paxilline sensitivity of the current. The inhibition of hEag1 (2 μM astemizole) or KCa1.1 (1 mM TEA) alone did not induce Ca 2+ deposition in SaOS-2 cultures, however, these inhibitors, at identical concentrations, increased Ca 2+ deposition evoked by the classical or pathological (inorganic phosphate, Pi) induction pathway without causing cytotoxicity, as reported by three completer assays (LDH release, MTT assay and SRB protein assay). We observed a similar effect of astemizole on Ca 2+ deposition in MG-63 osteosarcoma cultures as well. We propose that the increase in the osteogenic stimuli-induced mineral matrix formation of osteosarcoma cell lines by inhibiting hEag1 may be a useful tool to drive terminal differentiation of osteosarcoma.
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