4.6 Article

Cantharidin and norcantharidin impair sternness of pancreatic cancer cells by repressing the β-catenin pathway and strengthen the cytotoxicity of gemcitabine and erlotinib

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ONCOLOGY
Volume 47, Issue 5, Pages 1912-1922

Publisher

SPANDIDOS PUBL LTD
DOI: 10.3892/ijo.2015.3156

Keywords

pancreatic cancer; cancer stem cells; cantharidin; PP2A; beta-catenin

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81472296, 81101867, 81272542, 81200369]
  2. CSPAC-Celgene Foundation
  3. China International Medical Foundation [CIMF-F-H001-057]
  4. Special Foundation of Clinical Medicine of Jiangsu Provincial Bureau of Science and Technology [BL2014039]
  5. Jiangsu Provincial Bureau of Traditional Chinese Medicine [L213236]
  6. Jiangsu Provincial Bureau of Health [Z201206]
  7. Special Foundation of Wu Jieping Medical Foundation for Clinical Scientific Research [320.6753.1225, 320.6750.12242]
  8. Science and Education for Health Foundation of Suzhou for Youth [SWKQ1003, SWKQ1011]
  9. Science and Technology Project Foundation of Suzhou [SYS201112, SYSD2012137, SYS201335]
  10. Science and Technology Foundation of Suzhou Xiangcheng [SZXC2012-70, XJ201451]

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Increasing evidence suggests that tumors are composed of a heterogeneous cell population with a small subset of cancer stem cells (CSCs) that sustain tumor formation and growth, and are hypothesized to account for therapeutic resistance. Based on the expression of the surface markers CD44, CD24, and EPCAM, putative CSCs have also been identified in pancreatic cancers. It has been well established that aberrant activation of beta-catenin signaling pathway may contribute to the maintenance of CSCs. Cantharidin is an active constituent of mylabris, a traditional Chinese medicine. In our previous studies, we demonstrated that cantharidin treatment induced phosphorylation of beta-catenin, leading to repression on beta-catenin pathway. Therefore, in the present study, we investigated whether cantharidin and its derivant, norcantharidin, could repress the stemness of pancreatic cancer cells through repression on beta-catenin pathway. By using microarray and flow cytometry, we found that treatment with cantharidin and norcantharidin repressed the expression of CD44, CD24, and EPCAM at both mRNA and protein levels, leading to decreased CD44(+)/CD24(+)/EPCAW proportion, the putative pancreatic CSC subset. Pretreatment with the beta-catenin pathway inhibitor FH535, attenuated the cantharidin- and norcantharidin-inducrd repression on CD44, CD24, and EPCAM, suggesting cantharidin and its derivant repressed sternness of pancreatic cancer cells in beta-catenin pathway-dependent manner. Furthermore, cantharidin and norcantharidin strengthened the cytotoxicity of gemcitabine and erlotinib, two well established pharmacotherapeutics against pancreatic cancers, indicating cantharidin and norcantharidin could be promising candidates for reversing drug resistance in pancreatic cancers. In conclusion, we presently propose that cantharidin and norcantharidin hold their promise in pancreatic cancer therapy through repression on sternness and strengthening the cytotoxicity of the present therapeutics.

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