4.7 Article

Quinagolide Treatment Reduces Invasive and Angiogenic Properties of Endometrial Mesenchymal Stromal Cells

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23031775

Keywords

mesenchymal stromal cells; endometriosis; quinagolide; dopamine receptor agonist; endothelial differentiation; invasion

Funding

  1. Ministry of University and Research
  2. Ferring Pharmaceuticals A/S grant

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Quinagolide inhibits the invasive properties of endometrial mesenchymal stromal cells (E-MSCs) in endometriosis, but has no effect on their proliferation and limits their endothelial differentiation. These effects are mediated through activation of a specific dopamine receptor and are independent of VEGFR2 inhibition. The effects are more prominent in ectopic E-MSCs. These findings increase the rationale for the use of quinagolide in endometriosis treatment.
Endometrial mesenchymal stromal cells (E-MSCs) extensively contribute to the establishment and progression of endometrial ectopic lesions through formation of the stromal vascular tissue, and support to its growth and vascularization. As E-MSCs lack oestrogen receptors, endometriosis eradication cannot be achieved by hormone-based pharmacological approaches. Quinagolide is a non-ergot-derived dopamine receptor 2 agonist reported to display therapeutic effects in in vivo models of endometriosis. In the present study, we isolated E-MSCs from eutopic endometrial tissue and from ovarian and peritoneal endometriotic lesions, and we tested the effect of quinagolide on their proliferation and matrix invasion ability. Moreover, the effect of quinagolide on E-MSC endothelial differentiation was assessed in an endothelial co-culture model of angiogenesis. E-MSC lines expressed dopamine receptor 2, with higher expression in ectopic than eutopic ones. Quinagolide inhibited the invasive properties of E-MSCs, but not their proliferation, and limited their endothelial differentiation. The abrogation of the observed effects by spiperone, a dopamine receptor antagonist, confirmed specific dopamine receptor activation. At variance, no involvement of VEGFR2 inhibition was observed. Moreover, dopamine receptor 2 activation led to downregulation of AKT and its phosphorylation. Of interest, several effects were more prominent on ectopic E-MSCs with respect to eutopic lines. Together with the reported effects on endometrial and endothelial cells, the observed inhibition of E-MSCs may increase the rationale for quinagolide in endometriosis treatment.

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