Abstract

BackgroundSMAD1, a central mediator in TGF-β signaling, is involved in a broad range of biological activities including cell growth, apoptosis, development and immune response, and is implicated in diverse type of malignancies. Whether SMAD1 plays an important role in multiple myeloma (MM) pathogenesis and can serve as a therapeutic target are largely unknown.MethodsMyeloma cell lines and primary MM samples were used. Cell culture, cytotoxicity and apoptosis assay, siRNA transfection, Western blot, RT-PCR, Soft-agar colony formation, and migration assay, Chromatin immunoprecipitation (Chip), animal xenograft model studies and statistical analysis were applied in this study.ResultsWe demonstrate that SMAD1 is highly expressed in myeloma cells of MM patients with advanced stages or relapsed disease, and is associated with significantly shorter progression-free and overall survivals. Mechanistically, we show that SMAD1 is required for TGFβ-mediated proliferation in MM via an ID1/p21/p27 pathway. TGF-β also enhanced TNFα-Induced protein 8 (TNFAIP8) expression and inhibited apoptosis through SMAD1-mediated induction of NF-κB1. Accordingly, depletion of SMAD1 led to downregulation of NF-κB1 and TNFAIP8, resulting in caspase-8-induced apoptosis. In turn, inhibition of NF-κB1 suppressed SMAD1 and ID1 expression uncovering an autoregulatory loop. Dorsomorphin (DM), a SMAD1 inhibitor, exerted a dose-dependent cytotoxic effect on drug-resistant MM cells with minimal cytotoxicity to normal hematopoietic cells, and further synergized with the proteasomal-inhibitor bortezomib to effectively kill drug-resistant MM cells in vitro and in a myeloma xenograft model.ConclusionsThis study identifies SMAD1 regulation of NF-κB1/TNFAIP8 and ID1-p21/p27 as critical axes of MM drug resistance and provides a potentially new therapeutic strategy to treat drug resistance MM through targeted inhibition of SMAD1.

Highlights

  • Multiple myeloma (MM) is a hematologic neoplasm characterized by the clonal proliferation of malignant plasma cells

  • SMAD1 is elevated in the malignant cells of a subgroup of MM patients and its overexpression predicts disease progression and poor survival Given the evidence associating high SMAD1 expression with oncogenesis in other types of cancers, we investigated its effect in MM patients

  • Using Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) datasets, we observed a significant increase in the expression of SMAD1 in advanced stages of MM (GSE6477, relapse MM vs normal donor (ND) p = 0.047; newly diagnosed MM vs Normal donor (ND) p = 0.032) (Fig. 1a)

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Summary

Introduction

Multiple myeloma (MM) is a hematologic neoplasm characterized by the clonal proliferation of malignant plasma cells. SMAD1 mediates the signals of bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs) [6], which are involved in a range of biological activities including cell growth, apoptosis, development and immune responses. Several studies highlight an important role for SMAD1 in promoting cell invasion and metastasis in different types of cancers [8]. Overexpression of SMAD1 induces proliferation in stomach cancer cells in response to BMP-7 stimulation [9], and upon activation by BMP-9, SMAD1 promotes ovarian cancer cell growth [10]. SMAD1, a central mediator in TGF-β signaling, is involved in a broad range of biological activities including cell growth, apoptosis, development and immune response, and is implicated in diverse type of malignancies. Whether SMAD1 plays an important role in multiple myeloma (MM) pathogenesis and can serve as a therapeutic target are largely unknown

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