Abstract

HMG-CoA reductase (HMGCR) inhibitors, statins, are potent cholesterol reducing drugs that exhibit anti-tumor effects in vitro and in animal models, including attenuation of metastasis formation, and their use correlates with reduced cancer-specific mortality in retrospective human cohort studies. However, E-cadherin expressing epithelial- and mixed epithelial-mesenchymal cancer cell lines (reflective of primary and outgrowing metastatic tumor cells, respectively) require higher statin concentrations than mesenchymal-like tumor cells (reflective of in-circulation metastatic tumor cells) to achieve the same degree of growth inhibition. Here, we show that attenuation of HMGCR expression in the presence of atorvastatin leads to stronger growth inhibition than dual target blockade of the mevalonate pathway in relatively statin resistant cell lines, mainly through inhibition of protein prenylation pathways. Thus, combined inhibition of the mevalonate pathway's rate-limiting enzyme, HMGCR, can improve atorvastatin's growth inhibitory effect on epithelial- and mixed mesenchymal-epithelial cancer cells, a finding that may have implications for the design of future anti-metastatic cancer therapies.

Highlights

  • Metastases are the cause of death in most cancer patients

  • Higher HMG-CoA reductase (HMGCR) levels are associated with atorvastatin resistance in breast cancer [31]

  • To test if HMGCR levels were affected by statin therapy, we examined its expression in one of the statin-resistant (DU-145) cancer cells at atorvastatin concentrations below their respective IC50 values

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Summary

Introduction

Metastases are the cause of death in most cancer patients. In the 80-90% of breast cancer cases in which tumors are found and physically removed as seemingly singular nodules, 10-30% of patients suffer a relapse with metastases found at remote sites [1]. Half of those recurrences emerge more than five years after the apparent “cure” of the disease [3]. The formation of cancer metastases can be divided into distinct phases [4]. A fraction of epithelial, E-cadherin (E-cad) expressing primary tumor cells undergo partial or complete epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT)

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