Abstract

Cardiac glycosides are well known in the treatment of cardiovascular diseases; however, their application as treatment option for cancer patients is under discussion. We showed that the cardiac glycoside digitoxin and its analog AMANTADIG can inhibit the growth of renal cell carcinoma (RCC) cell lines and increase G2/M cell cycle arrest. To identify the signaling pathways and molecular basis of this G2/M arrest, microRNAs were profiled using microRNA arrays. Cardiac glycoside treatment significantly deregulated two microRNAs, miR-2278 and miR-670-5p. Pathway enrichment analysis showed that all cardiac glycoside treatments affected the MAPK and the axon guidance pathway. Within these pathways, three genes, MAPK1, NRAS and RAC2, were identified as in silico targets of the deregulated miRNAs. MAPK1 and NRAS are known regulators of G2/M cell cycle arrest. AMANTADIG treatment enhanced the expression of phosphorylated MAPK1 in 786-O cells. Secondly, we studied the expression of survivin known to be affected by cardiac glycosides and to regulate the G2/M cell phase. AMANTADIG treatment upregulated the expression of the pro-apoptotic survivin-2B variant in Caki-1 and 786-O cells. Moreover, treatment with AMANTADIG resulted in significantly lower survivin protein expression compared to 786-O control cells. Summarizing, treatment with all cardiac glycosides induced G2/M cell cycle arrest and downregulated the miR-2278 and miR-670-5p in microarray analysis. All cardiac glycosides affected the MAPK-pathway and survivin expression, both associated with the G2/M phase. Because cells in the G2/M phase are radio- and chemotherapy sensitive, cardiac glycosides like AMANTADIG could potentially improve the efficacy of radio- and/or chemotherapy in RCCs.

Highlights

  • Renal Cell Carcinoma (RCC) is the ninth most common cancer worldwide, with approximately 338,000 new cases diagnosed in 2012 [1]

  • We recently showed that a new semisynthetic cardiac glycoside analog, 3β-[2-(1-amantadine)-1-on-ethylamine]digitoxigenin (AMANTADIG), inhibits the growth of leukemia, prostate cancer and renal cell carcinoma cell lines [11]

  • We studied the effect of cardiac glycoside treatment on the viability of four RCC cell lines, Caki-1, Caki-2, A498 and 786-O and determined the IC50 values

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Renal Cell Carcinoma (RCC) is the ninth most common cancer worldwide, with approximately 338,000 new cases diagnosed in 2012 [1]. Cardiac glycosides have garnered attention as a potential cancer treatment option [4, 5]. They exhibit antiproliferative and apoptotic characteristics in several cancer cell lines, including renal cell carcinoma cell lines, but they affect normal cell lines to a much lesser extent [6,7,8,9,10]. We recently showed that a new semisynthetic cardiac glycoside analog, 3β-[2-(1-amantadine)-1-on-ethylamine]digitoxigenin (AMANTADIG), inhibits the growth of leukemia, prostate cancer and renal cell carcinoma cell lines [11]. Several reports have indicated that cardiac glycosides may function by affecting Na+/K+ATPase, especially its α subunits [4, 5], the molecular basis of their function remains incompletely understood

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call