4.5 Article

GPR56 Drives Colorectal Tumor Growth and Promotes Drug Resistance through Upregulation of MDR1 Expression via a RhoA-Mediated Mechanism

Journal

MOLECULAR CANCER RESEARCH
Volume 17, Issue 11, Pages 2196-2207

Publisher

AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/1541-7786.MCR-19-0436

Keywords

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Funding

  1. M.D. Anderson Institutional Tissue Bank [NCI P30 CA016672]
  2. NIH [NCI R01 CA226894]
  3. Welch Foundation Endowment Fund Award [L-AU-0002-19940421]
  4. Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas (CPRIT) [RP150640]
  5. Center for Clinical & Translational Sciences Core Lab Pilot Grant (UT Health)
  6. CPRIT [RP160235, RP170245]

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Drug resistance continues to be a major obstacle of effective therapy for colorectal cancer, leading to tumor relapse or treatment failure. Cancer stem cells (CSC) or tumor-initiating cells are a subpopulation of tumor cells which retain the capacity for self-renewal and are suggested to be implicated in drug resistance. LGR5 is highly expressed in colorectal cancer and marks CSCs that drive tumor growth and metastasis. LGR5((+)) CSCs cells were shown to interconvert with more drug-resistant LGR5((-)) cancer cells, and treatment with LGR5-targeted antibody-drug conjugates (ADC) eliminated LGR5((+)) tumors, yet a fraction of LGR5((+)) tumors eventually recurred. Therefore, it is important to identify mechanisms associated with CSC plasticity and drug resistance in order to develop curative therapies. Here, we show that loss of LGR5 in colon cancer cells enhanced resistance to irinotecan and 5-fluorouracil and increased expression of adhesion G-protein-coupled receptor, GPR56. GPR56 expression was significantly higher in primary colon tumors versus matched normal tissues and correlated with poor survival outcome. GPR56 enhanced drug resistance through upregulation of MDR1 levels via a RhoA-mediated signaling mechanism. Loss of GPR56 led to suppression of tumor growth and increased sensitivity of cancer cells to chemotherapy and monomethyl auristatin E-linked anti-LGR5 ADCs, by reducing MDR1 levels. These findings suggest that upregulation of GPR56 may be a mechanism associated with CSC plasticity by which LGR5((-)) cancer cells acquire a more drug-resistant phenotype.

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