Chemoresistance of cancer cells, resulting from various mechanisms, is a significant obstacle to the effectiveness of modern cancer therapies. Targeting fibroblast growth factors (FGFs) and their rece Show more
Chemoresistance of cancer cells, resulting from various mechanisms, is a significant obstacle to the effectiveness of modern cancer therapies. Targeting fibroblast growth factors (FGFs) and their receptors (FGFRs) is becoming crucial, as their high activity significantly contributes to cancer development and progression by driving cell proliferation and activating signaling pathways that enhance drug resistance. We investigated the potential of honokiol and FGF ligand trap in blocking the FGF1/FGFR1 axis to counteract drug resistance. Using PEAQ-ITC, we verified direct interaction of honokiol with the FGFR1 kinase domain. We then demonstrated the effect of FGF1/FGFR1 inhibition on taltobulin resistance in cells expressing FGFR1. Finally, we generated drug-resistant clones by prolonged exposure of cells with negligible FGFR levels to taltobulin alone, taltobulin and honokiol, or taltobulin and FGF ligand trap. We demonstrated for the first time a direct interaction of honokiol with the FGFR1 kinase domain, resulting in inhibition of downstream signaling pathways. We revealed that both honokiol and FGF ligand trap prevent FGF1-dependent protection against taltobulin in cancer cells expressing FGFR1. In addition, we showed that cells obtained by long-term exposure to taltobulin are resistant to both taltobulin and other microtubule-targeting drugs, and exhibit elevated levels of FGFR1 and cyclin D. We also found that the presence of FGF-ligand trap prevents the development of long-term resistance to taltobulin. Our results shed light on how blocking the FGF1/FGFR1 axis by honokiol and FGF ligand trap could help develop more effective cancer therapies, potentially preventing the emergence of drug-resistant relapses. Show less
When the nerve tissue is injured, endogenous agonist of melanocortin type 4 (MC4) receptor, α-MSH, exerts tonic pronociceptive action in the central nervous system, contributing to sustaining the neur Show more
When the nerve tissue is injured, endogenous agonist of melanocortin type 4 (MC4) receptor, α-MSH, exerts tonic pronociceptive action in the central nervous system, contributing to sustaining the neuropathic pain state and counteracting the analgesic effects of exogenous opioids. With the intent of enhancing opioid analgesia in neuropathy by blocking the MC4 activation, so-called parent compounds (opioid agonist, MC4 antagonist) were joined together using various linkers to create novel bifunctional hybrid compounds. Analgesic action of four hybrids was tested after intrathecal (i.t.) administration in mouse models of acute and neuropathic pain (chronic constriction injury model, CCI). Under nerve injury conditions, one of the hybrids, UW3, induced analgesia in 1500 times lower i.t. dose than the opioid parent (ED50: 0.0002 nmol for the hybrid, 0.3 nmol for the opioid parent) and in an over 16000 times lower dose than the MC4 parent (ED50: 3.33 nmol) as measured by the von Frey test. Two selected hybrids were tested for analgesic properties in CCI mice after intravenous (i.v.) and intraperitoneal (i.p.) administration. Opioid receptor antagonists and MC4 receptor agonists diminished the analgesic action of these two hybrids studied, though the extent of this effect differed between the hybrids; this suggests that linker is of key importance here. Further results indicate a significant advantage of hybrid compounds over the physical mixture of individual pharmacophores in their analgesic effect. All this evidence justifies the idea of synthesizing a bifunctional opioid agonist-linker-MC4 antagonist compound, as such structure may bring important benefits in neuropathic pain treatment. Show less
Apolipoprotein A-V (apoA-V) is a low-abundance plasma protein that modulates triacylglycerol homeostasis. Gene transfer studies were undertaken in apoa5 (-/-) mice to define the mechanism underlying t Show more
Apolipoprotein A-V (apoA-V) is a low-abundance plasma protein that modulates triacylglycerol homeostasis. Gene transfer studies were undertaken in apoa5 (-/-) mice to define the mechanism underlying the correlation between the single-nucleotide polymorphism c.553G>T in APOA5 and hypertriglyceridemia. Adeno-associated virus (AAV) 2/8-mediated gene transfer of wild-type apoA-V induced a dramatic lowering of plasma triacylglycerol in apoa5 (-/-) mice, whereas AAV2/8-Gly162Cys apoA-V (corresponding to the c.553G>T single-nucleotide polymorphism: rs2075291; p.Gly185Cys when numbering includes signal sequence) had a modest effect. Characterization studies revealed that plasma levels of wild-type and G162C apoA-V in transduced mice were similar and within the physiological range. Fractionation of plasma from mice transduced with AAV2/8-G162C apoA-V indicated that, unlike wild-type apoA-V, >50% of G162C apoA-V was recovered in the lipoprotein-free fraction. Nonreducing SDS-PAGE immunoblot analysis provided evidence that G162C apoA-V present in the lipoprotein-free fraction, but not that portion associated with lipoproteins, displayed altered electrophoretic mobility consistent with disulfide-linked heterodimer formation. Immunoprecipitation followed by liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry of human plasma from subjects homozygous for wild-type APOA5 and c.553G>T APOA5 revealed that G162C apoA-V forms adducts with extraneous plasma proteins including fibronectin, kininogen-1, and others. Substitution of Cys for Gly at position 162 of mature apoA-V introduces a free cysteine that forms disulfide bonds with plasma proteins such that its lipoprotein-binding and triacylglycerol-modulation functions are compromised. Show less