4.7 Article

Secretin Receptor as a Target in Gastrointestinal Cancer: Expression Analysis and Ligand Development

Journal

BIOMEDICINES
Volume 10, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines10030536

Keywords

secretin; secretin receptor; SCTR; overexpression; PDAC; esophageal cancer; peptide analogue; partial agonist; antagonist

Funding

  1. Bundesministerium fur Bildung und Forschung (BMBF) [IP614, IPT614A]

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This study demonstrates high overexpression of SCTR in esophageal and pancreatic cancer and identifies key amino acids that play a crucial role in the binding and activation of secretin with SCTR. Alterations in these structures affect their activity in cells. Future research needs to explore the application of further enhanced secretin analogues in tumor imaging and therapy.
Secretin was originally discovered as a gastrointestinal peptide that stimulates fluid secretion from the pancreas and liver and delays gastric emptying. In disease, a secretin receptor (SCTR) was found to occur as a splice variant in gastrinoma and pancreatic adenocarcinoma. Overexpression of SCTR has been described for gastrinomas, carcinoid tumors of the lung and cholangiocarcinoma. SCTR therefore is considered a candidate target for molecular tumor imaging as well as for peptide receptor radioligand therapy (PRRT) in a number of oncological indications. The aim of this study was to characterize SCTR expression in esophageal and pancreatic cancer, demonstrating for the first time high SCTR overexpression in these tumor types. In total, 65 of 70 pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma tissues stained strongly positive for SCTR in immunohistochemistry, as did most of the 151 esophageal cancer samples, with minor influence of grading in both entities. In addition, the aim of this study was to further delineate residues in human secretin that are critical for binding to and activation of human SCTR. For a potential development of short and metabolically stable analogs for clinical use, it was intended to probe the peptide for its capacity to incorporate deletions and substitutions without losing its affinity to SCTR. In a systematic approach, a library of 146 secretin variants containing single amino acid substitutions as well as truncations on either end was tested in beta-arrestin2-GFP translocation and fluorescent ligand internalization assays employing high-content analysis, in cAMP assays which run in agonist and antagonist mode, and in radioligand binding. The main structural determinants of SCTR binding and activation were localized to the N-terminus, with His(1), Asp(3) being among the most sensitive positions, followed by Phe(6), Thr(7) and Leu(10). Aminoterminal truncation caused a rapid decline in receptor activity and most of these variants proved to be partial agonists showing antagonistic properties. In this study, the most potent novel antagonist showed an IC50 of 309 +/- 74 nM in the beta-arrestin2-GFP translocation assay on human SCTR while remaining a weak partial agonist. Future studies will have to demonstrate the utility of further enhanced secretin analogues as tracers for in vivo imaging and therapy.

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