4.7 Article

Modulating the ERK1/2-MMP1 Axis through Corosolic Acid Inhibits Metastasis of Human Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma Cells

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22168641

Keywords

corosolic acid; human oral squamous cell carcinoma cells; metastasis; ERK1; 2; MMP1

Funding

  1. Chung-Kang Branch, Cheng-Ching General Hospital Research Fund [CH10900245A]
  2. Kaohsiung Medical University Hospital [KMUH109-M901]
  3. Kaohsiung Medical University Research Center Grant [KMU-TC109A02-3]

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Corosolic acid inhibits the migration and invasion of human oral squamous cell carcinoma cells by targeting the ERK1/2-MMP1 axis, suggesting it may serve as a novel strategy for treating OSCC.
Corosolic acid (CA; 2 alpha-hydroxyursolic acid) is a natural pentacyclic triterpenoid with antioxidant, antitumour and antimetastatic activities against various tumour cells during tumourigenesis. However, CA's antitumour effect and functional roles on human oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) cells are utterly unknown. In this study, our results demonstrated that CA significantly exerted an inhibitory effect on matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)1 expression, cell migration and invasion without influencing cell growth or the cell cycle of human OSCC cells. The critical role of MMP1 was confirmed using the GEPIA database and showed that patients have a high expression of MMP1 and have a shorter overall survival rate, confirmed on the Kaplan-Meier curve assay. In the synergistic inhibitory analysis, CA and siMMP1 co-treatment showed a synergically inhibitory influence on MMP1 expression and invasion of human OSCC cells. The ERK1/2 pathway plays an essential role in mediating tumour progression. We found that CA significantly inhibits the phosphorylation of ERK1/2 dose-dependently. The ERK1/2 pathway played an essential role in the CA-mediated downregulation of MMP1 expression and in invasive motility in human OSCC cells. These findings first demonstrated the inhibitory effects of CA on OSCC cells' progression through inhibition of the ERK1/2-MMP1 axis. Therefore, CA might represent a novel strategy for treating OSCC.

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