Abstract
The high mortality of epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) is mainly caused by resistance to the available therapies. In EOC, the endothelin-1 (ET-1, EDN1)-endothelin A receptor (ETAR, EDNRA) signaling axis regulates the epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) and a chemoresistant phenotype. However, there is a paucity of knowledge about how ET-1 mediates drug resistance. Here, we define a novel bypass mechanism through which ETAR/β-arrestin-1 (β-arr1, ARRB1) links Wnt signaling to acquire chemoresistant and EMT phenotype. We found that ETAR/β-arr1 activity promoted nuclear complex with β-catenin and p300, resulting in histone acetylation, chromatin reorganization, and enhanced transcription of genes, such as ET-1, enhancing the network that sustains chemoresistance. Silencing of β-arr1 or pharmacologic treatment with the dual ETAR/ETBR antagonist macitentan prevented core complex formation and restored drug sensitivity, impairing the signaling pathways involved in cell survival, EMT, and invasion. In vivo macitentan treatment reduced tumor growth, vascularization, intravasation, and metastatic progression. The combination of macitentan and cisplatinum resulted in the potentiation of the cytotoxic effect, indicating that macitentan can enhance sensitivity to chemotherapy. Investigations in clinical specimens of chemoresistant EOC tissues confirmed increased recruitment of β-arr1 and β-catenin to ET-1 gene promoter. In these tissues, high expression of ETAR significantly associated with poor clinical outcome and chemoresistance. Collectively, our findings reveal the existence of a novel mechanism by which ETAR/β-arr1 signaling is integrated with the Wnt/β-catenin pathway to sustain chemoresistance in EOC, and they offer a solid rationale for clinical evaluation of macitentan in combination with chemotherapy to overcome chemoresistance in this setting.
Highlights
Chemoresistance heralding tumor recurrence is the major cause of poor survival rates of patients with ovarian cancer [1]
Because ET-1 triggers an intricate network of cross-talk through the transactivation of receptor tyrosine kinases [2, 19], we investigated whether ET-1 is able to activate vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-2 (VEGFR-2), which has been reported to be necessary for Epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) growth and drug sensitivity [34, 35]
We report that ETAR/b-arr1 is a critical mediator of the chemoresistant phenotype linking b-catenin signaling
Summary
Chemoresistance heralding tumor recurrence is the major cause of poor survival rates of patients with ovarian cancer [1]. Epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) cells activate autocrine programs that may opt as survival mechanisms in response to chemotherapy [1, 2]. The endothelin-1 (ET-1, EDN1)–endothelin A receptor (ETAR, EDNRA) axis is aberrantly activated in EOC to stimulate cell proliferation, survival, angiogenesis, and invasion, and increased ETAR expression has been correlated with platinum resistance and EMT marker expression [2, 6,7,8,9]. In EOC, ETBR (EDNRB) appears to have protumorigenic activity by promoting tumor survival through the evasion of immune response. ETBR plays a role in inducing tumor angiogenesis and lymphangiogenesis by inducing in blood and lymphatic endothelial cell proliferation, survival, and migration [12, 13]. A complex cross-talk between ET-1 signaling and other growth factor pathways drives tumor progression via the scaffold protein b-arrestin www.aacrjournals.org
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