Abstract
Sanguisorba officinalis L. (SA) is a common herb for cancer treatment in the clinic, particularly during the consolidation phase to prevent occurrence or metastasis. Nevertheless, there are limited studies reporting the molecular mechanisms about its anti-metastatic function. It is well demonstrated that autophagy is one of the critical mechanisms accounting for metastasis and anti-cancer pharmacological actions of Chinese herbs. On the threshold, the regulatory effects and molecular mechanisms of SA in suppressing autophagy-related breast cancer metastasis were investigated in this study. In vitro findings demonstrated that SA potently suppressed the proliferation, colony formations well as metastasis process in triple-negative breast cancer. Network and biological analyses predicted that SA mainly targeted caveolin-1 (Cav-1) to induce anti-metastatic effects, and one of the core mechanisms was via regulation of autophagy. Further experiments—including western blotting, transmission electron microscopy, GFP-mRFP-LC3 immunofluorescence, and lysosomal-activity detection—validated SA as a potent late-stage autophagic inhibitor by increasing microtubule-associated light chain 3-II (LC3-II) conversion, decreasing acidic vesicular-organelle formation, and inducing lysosomal dysfunction even under conditions of either starvation or hypoxia. Furthermore, the anti-autophagic and anti-metastatic activity of SA was Cav-1-dependent. Specifically, Cav-1 knockdown significantly facilitated SA-mediated inhibition of autophagy and metastasis. Furthermore, hypoxia inducible factor-1α (Hif-1α) overexpression attenuated the SA-induced inhibitory activities on Cav-1, autophagy, and metastasis, indicating that SA may have inhibited autophagy-related metastasis via Hif-1α/Cav-1 signaling. In both mouse breast cancer xenograft and zebrafish xenotransplantation models, SA inhibited breast cancer growth and inhibited late-phase autophagy in vivo, which was accompanied by suppression of Hif-1α/Cav-1 signaling and the epithelial-mesenchymal transition. Overall, our findings not only indicate that SA acts as a novel late-phase autophagic inhibitor with anti-metastatic activities in triple-negative breast cancer, but also highlight Cav-1 as a regulator in controlling late-phase autophagic activity.
Highlights
Breast cancer undoubtedly ranks the most frequent female malignancy and the second-leading fatal reason for women, with 268,600 new cases and 41,760 related deaths among female populations in the United States in 2019 (Siegel et al, 2019; Britt et al, 2020)
We further demonstrated that SA inhibited breast cancer metastasis primarily by restraining late-stage autophagy via Hif-1α/Cav-1 signaling
After drug preparation and quality control of SA (Supplementary Figure S1), we investigate whether SA could affect the growth of multiple breast cancer cell lines including two triple-negative phenotypes MDA-MB-231 and BT-549, a luminal-like phenotype MCF-7, as well as a non-malignant mammary epithelial cell HBL-100
Summary
Breast cancer undoubtedly ranks the most frequent female malignancy and the second-leading fatal reason for women, with 268,600 new cases and 41,760 related deaths among female populations in the United States in 2019 (Siegel et al, 2019; Britt et al, 2020). Remarkable endeavor has been made for seeking therapeutic strategies and combating breast cancer, metastasis is still a major clinical challenge that accounts for the primary cause of cancer-related mortalities, for triple-negative breast cancer. 90% of cancer-related deaths are attributable to metastasis, resulting in a dramatic reduction in the reported OS to approximately 26.3% among women with distant metastatic lesions (Peto et al, 2012; Wang et al, 2017). 10–20.8% of breast cancer cases are initially diagnosed as triple-negative phenotypes, while 20–50% of localized primary cases eventually develop into distant recurrent phenotypes even following successful primary tumor resection and adjuvant therapy (Lu et al, 2009). The suppression of metastasis is an expectable therapeutic target of breast cancer, and deciphering the involved metastatic mechanisms may speed up improving effective strategies against breast cancer
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