4.7 Article

Nonsteroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs Prevent Vincristine-Dependent Cancer-Associated Fibroblasts Formation

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms20081941

Keywords

EndMT; immunomodulation; CAFs; colon cancer; microtubules; IL-6; TGF-s; vincristine; aspirin; ibuprofen

Funding

  1. Polish-Norwegian Research Program, grant MOMENTO grant [Pol-Nor/209521/5/2013]
  2. National Science Center, grant Sonata 13 [2017/26/D/NZ7/00633]
  3. Medical University of Lodz [502-03/6-171-02/502-64-120]

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Vincristine is used in the clinical treatment of colon cancer, especially in patients diagnosed in the advanced phase of cancer development. Unfortunately, similar to other agents used during antitumor therapy, vincristine might induce chemoresistance. Studies of this process focus mainly on the analysis of the molecular mechanisms within cancer, usually ignoring the role of stromal cells. Our present findings confirm that vincristine stimulates the secretion of tumor growth factors class beta and interleukin-6 from cancer-associated fibroblasts as a result of paracrine stimulation by cancer cells. Based on alterations in morphology, modulation of capillary formation, and changes in endothelial and mesenchymal marker profile, our findings demonstrate that higher levels of tumor growth factor-s and interleukin-6 enhance cancer-associated fibroblast-like cell formation through endothelial-mesenchymal transition and that nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug treatment (aspirin and ibuprofen) is able to inhibit this phenomenon. The process appears to be regulated by the rate of microtubule polymerization, depending on -tubulin composition. While higher levels of tubulin-2 and tubulin-4 caused slowed polymerization and reduced the level of factors secreted to the extracellular matrix, tubulin-3 induced the opposite effect. We conclude that nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs should be considered for use during vincristine monotherapy in the treatment of patients diagnosed with colorectal cancer.

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