4.7 Article

Opposing Effects of Chelidonine on Tyrosine and Serine Phosphorylation of STAT3 in Human Uveal Melanoma Cells

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms222312974

Keywords

STAT3 signaling; chelidonine; interleukin-6; flow cytometry; confocal microscopy; uveal melanoma

Funding

  1. EU and the European Social Fund [EFOP-3.6.3-VEKOP-16-2017-00009]
  2. National Research, Development and Innovation Office, Hungary [ANN 135107, ANN 133421, K 138075]

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STAT3 is a crucial transcription factor involved in cancer development, with its activation playing a key role. Interleukin-6 is a major activator of STAT3, while chelidonine exerts regulatory effects on STAT3 signaling in treating uveal melanoma cells.
STAT3 is a transcription factor that regulates various cellular processes with oncogenic potential, thereby promoting tumorigenesis when activated uncontrolled. STAT3 activation is mediated by its tyrosine phosphorylation, triggering dimerization and nuclear translocation. STAT3 also contains a serine phosphorylation site, with a postulated regulatory role in STAT3 activation and G2/M transition. Interleukin-6, a major activator of STAT3, is present in elevated concentrations in uveal melanomas, suggesting contribution of dysregulated STAT3 activation to their pathogenesis. Here, we studied the impact of chelidonine on STAT3 signaling in human uveal melanoma cells. Chelidonine, an alkaloid isolated from Chelidonium majus, disrupts microtubules, causes mitotic arrest and provokes cell death in numerous tumor cells. According to our flow cytometry and confocal microscopy data, chelidonine abrogated IL-6-induced activation and nuclear translocation, but amplified constitutive serine phosphorylation of STAT3. Both effects were restricted to a fraction of cells only, in an all-or-none fashion. A partial overlap could be observed between the affected subpopulations; however, no direct connection could be proven. This study is the first proof on a cell-by-cell basis for the opposing effects of a microtubule-targeting agent on the two types of STAT3 phosphorylation.

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