4.5 Article

Targeting protein geranylgeranylation slows tumor development in a murine model of prostate cancer metastasis

Journal

CANCER BIOLOGY & THERAPY
Volume 18, Issue 11, Pages 872-882

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/15384047.2016.1219817

Keywords

Drug development; drug validation; isoprenoid biosynthetic pathway; prostate cancer metastasis; post-translational modification

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institute of Health Pharmacological Sciences Training Grant [T32 GM067795]
  2. Roy J. Carver Charitable Trust
  3. Roland W. Holden Family Program for Experimental Therapeutics

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The isoprenoid biosynthetic pathway (IBP) plays a critical role in providing substrates and enzymes necessary for the post-translational modification and thus activation of a number of proteins involved in prostate cancer metastasis. Previous work by our lab found novel compound disodium [(6Z, 11E, 15E)-9-[bis (sodiooxy) phosphoryl]17-hydroxy-2,6,12,16-tetramethyheptadeca-2,6,11,15-tetraen-9-yl] phosphonate (GGOHBP), which inhibits the IBP enzyme geranylgeranyl diphosphate synthase (GGDPS), reduced protein geranylgeranylation without altering protein farnesylation. This activity significantly reduced adrenal gland tumor burden in a murine model of human prostate cancer metastasis which relied on treatment of established disease. The present study determined the ability of GGDPS inhibition to slow the development of prostate cancer metastasis in a preventative murine model. Using tail vein injection of human derived PC-3 prostate cancer cells 4 d after initiating daily GGOHBP or vehicle treatments, we found GGOHBP significantly reduced whole body tumor burden, significantly slowed the development of tumors, and prolonged overall survival as compared to vehicle treated animals. The observed reduction in soft tissue tumor burden corresponded to a biochemical reduction in Rap1A geranylgeranylation, which for prostate cancer is important in its own merit and which serves as a surrogate marker for Rho family, i.e. Rac, protein modification. This effect was present in all treated mice pointing to strong target engagement, which was not observed in non-tumor burdened tissues or control mice. Our findings reiterate a role for protein geranylgeranylation in the development of prostate cancer metastasis in vivo.

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