Abstract

Colorectal cancer is one of the leading causes of cancer-related death worldwide. The adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) gene is mutated in hereditary colorectal tumors and in more than 80% of sporadic colorectal tumors. APC mutations impair β-catenin degradation, leading to its permanent stabilization and increased transcription of cancer-driving target genes. In colon cancer, impairment of β-catenin degradation leads to its cytoplasmic accumulation, nuclear translocation, and subsequent activation of tumor cell proliferation. Suppressing β-catenin signaling in cancer cells therefore appears to be a promising strategy for new anticancer strategies. Recently, we discovered a novel Vibrio cholerae cytotoxin, motility-associated killing factor A (MakA), that affects both invertebrate and vertebrate hosts. It promotes bacterial survival and proliferation in invertebrate predators but has unknown biological role(s) in mammalian hosts. Here, we report that MakA can cause lethality of tumor cells via induction of apoptosis. Interestingly, MakA exhibited potent cytotoxic activity, in particular against several tested cancer cell lines, while appearing less toxic toward nontransformed cells. MakA bound to the tumor cell surface became internalized into the endolysosomal compartment and induced leakage of endolysosomal membranes, causing cytosolic release of cathepsins and activation of proapoptotic proteins. In addition, MakA altered β-catenin integrity in colon cancer cells, partly through a caspase- and proteasome-dependent mechanism. Importantly, MakA inhibited β-catenin-mediated tumor cell proliferation. Remarkably, intratumor injection of MakA significantly reduced tumor development in a colon cancer murine solid tumor model. These data identify MakA as a novel candidate to be considered in new strategies for development of therapeutic agents against colon cancer.

Highlights

  • Cancer is not a single disease but a set of complex events with distinct genetic and histological features

  • Caspases were shown to play an important role in motility-associated killing factor A (MakA)-mediated apoptosis of colon carcinoma cells

  • These effects suggest that using MakA to target β-catenin can be a promising new approach to colon cancer treatment, by reducing the Wnt signaling that is important for colon cancer development

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Cancer is not a single disease but a set of complex events with distinct genetic and histological features. Among different types of cancer, colon cancer is considered the third most common type of cancer and the second leading cause of cancer-related death in industrialized countries.[5] Colon cancer originates from neoplastic transformation of epithelial cells of the colon. Both environmental and genetic factors play important roles in the development of colon cancer. The bacterial protein and virulence factor MakA, from Vibrio cholerae, was examined for possible anticancer effects. We demonstrated its potential as a therapeutic against cancerous tissue growth in a murine solid colon tumor model

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
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| DISCUSSION
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