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Testing calpain inhibition in tumor endothelial cells: novel targetable biomarkers against glioblastoma malignancy
oleh: Laura Guarnaccia, Stefania Elena Navone, Laura Begani, Emanuela Barilla, Emanuele Garzia, Emanuele Garzia, Rolando Campanella, Monica Miozzo, Monica Miozzo, Laura Fontana, Laura Fontana, Giovanni Alotta, Chiara Cordiglieri, Chiara Gaudino, Luigi Schisano, Antonella Ampollini, Laura Riboni, Marco Locatelli, Marco Locatelli, Giovanni Marfia, Giovanni Marfia
| Format: | Article |
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| Diterbitkan: | Frontiers Media S.A. 2024-08-01 |
Deskripsi
IntroductionGlioblastoma IDH-wildtype (GBM) is the most malignant brain tumor in adults, with a poor prognosis of approximately 15 months after diagnosis. Most patients suffer from a recurrence in <1 year, and this renders GBM a life-threatening challenge. Among molecular mechanisms driving GBM aggressiveness, angiogenesis mediated by GBM endothelial cells (GECs) deserves consideration as a therapeutic turning point. In this scenario, calpains, a family of ubiquitously expressed calcium-dependent cysteine proteases, emerged as promising targets to be investigated as a novel therapeutic strategy and prognostic tissue biomarkers.MethodsTo explore this hypothesis, GECs were isolated from n=10 GBM biopsies and characterized phenotypically by immunofluorescence. The expression levels of calpains were evaluated by qRT-PCR and Western blot, and their association with patients’ prognosis was estimated by Pearson correlation and Kaplan–Meier survival analysis. Calpain targeting efficacy was assessed by a time- and dose-dependent proliferation curve, MTT assay for viability, caspase-3/7 activity, migration and angiogenesis in vitro, and gene and protein expression level modification.ResultsImmunofluorescence confirmed the endothelial phenotype of our primary GECs. A significant overexpression was observed for calpain-1/2/3 (CAPN) and calpain-small-subunits-1/2 (CAPNS1), whereas calpastatin gene, the calpain natural inhibitor, was reported to be downregulated. A significant negative correlation was observed between CAPN1/CAPNS1 and patient overall survival. GEC challenging revealed that the inhibition of calpain-1 exerts the strongest proapoptotic efficacy, so GEC mortality reached the 80%, confirmed by the increased activity of caspase-3/7. Functional assays revealed a strong affection of in vitro migration and angiogenesis. Gene and protein expression proved a downregulation of MAPK, VEGF/VEGFRs, and Bcl-2, and an upregulation of caspases and Bax-family mediators.ConclusionOverall, the differential expression of calpains and their correlation with patient survival suggest a novel promising target pathway, whose blockade showed encouraging results toward precision medicine strategies.