4.4 Article

Next Generation Lipophilic Bisphosphonate Shows Antitumor Effect in Colorectal Cancer In Vitro and In Vivo

Journal

PATHOLOGY & ONCOLOGY RESEARCH
Volume 26, Issue 3, Pages 1957-1969

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.1007/s12253-019-00789-9

Keywords

Lipophilic bisphosphonate; Zoledronic acid; Colorectal cancer; In vitro; In vivo

Funding

  1. Hungarian National Research, Development and Innovation Office [MOB80325, NVKP-16-1-2016-0020]
  2. Hungarian Scientific Research Fund - OTKA [K116151]
  3. HAS Postdoctoral Fellowship Program [450,071]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Bisphosphonates, despite proven antitumor effect in vitro in many tumor types, are currently used only for treatment of osteoporosis and bone metastasis. Colorectal cancer is the third most commonly diagnosed type of cancer and lacks targeted therapy for RAS or RAF mutation carrying cases. A new lipophilic bisphosphonate showed promising results in lung cancer models, but their effect on colorectal cancer cells was not investigated excessively. Antitumor effects and impact on RAS-related signalization of zoledronic acid (ZA) and a lipophilic bisphosphonate (BPH1222) were investigated on 7 human colorectal cancer cell lines in vitro and in vivo. Furthermore, mutant KRAS dependent effect of prenylation inhibition was investigated using isogeneic cell lines. Both bisphosphonates reduced cell viability in vitro in a dose-dependent manner. Both compounds changed cell cycle distribution similarly by increasing the proportion of cells either in the S or in the subG1 phase or both. However, BPH1222 exerted higher inhibitory effect on spheroid growth than ZA. Interestingly, we found profound alterations in phosphorylation level of Erk and S6 proteins upon ZA or BPH1222 treatment. Furthermore, investigation of a mutant KRAS isogeneic model system suggests that the drugs interfere also with the mutant KRAS proteins. In vivo experiments with KRAS mutant xenograft model also revealed growth inhibitory potential of bisphosphonate treatment. Our results show that lipophilic bisphosphonates might extend the therapeutic spectrum of bisphosphonate drugs and could be considered as additional treatment approaches in colorectal cancer.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available