Abstract
BackgroundCachexia, a multifactorial syndrome affecting more than 50% of patients with advanced cancer and responsible for ~20% of cancer‐associated deaths, is still a poorly understood process without a standard cure available. Skeletal muscle atrophy caused by systemic inflammation is a major clinical feature of cachexia, leading to weight loss, dampening patients' quality of life, and reducing patients' response to anticancer therapy. RAGE (receptor for advanced glycation end‐products) is a multiligand receptor of the immunoglobulin superfamily and a mediator of muscle regeneration, inflammation, and cancer.MethodsBy using murine models consisting in the injection of colon 26 murine adenocarcinoma (C26‐ADK) or Lewis lung carcinoma (LLC) cells in BALB/c and C57BL/6 or Ager −/− (RAGE‐null) mice, respectively, we investigated the involvement of RAGE signalling in the main features of cancer cachexia, including the inflammatory state. In vitro experiments were performed using myotubes derived from C2C12 myoblasts or primary myoblasts isolated from C57BL/6 wild type and Ager −/− mice treated with the RAGE ligand, S100B (S100 calcium‐binding protein B), TNF (tumor necrosis factor)α±IFN (interferon) γ, and tumour cell‐ or masses‐conditioned media to analyse hallmarks of muscle atrophy. Finally, muscles of wild type and Ager −/− mice were injected with TNFα/IFNγ or S100B in a tumour‐free environment.ResultsWe demonstrate that RAGE is determinant to activate signalling pathways leading to muscle protein degradation in the presence of proinflammatory cytokines and/or tumour‐derived cachexia‐inducing factors. We identify the RAGE ligand, S100B, as a novel factor able to induce muscle atrophy per se via a p38 MAPK (p38 mitogen‐activated protein kinase)/myogenin axis and STAT3 (signal transducer and activator of transcription 3)‐dependent MyoD (myoblast determination protein 1) degradation. Lastly, we found that in cancer conditions, an increase in serum levels of tumour‐derived S100B and HMGB1 (high mobility group box 1) occurs leading to chronic activation/overexpression of RAGE, which induces hallmarks of cancer cachexia (i.e. muscle wasting, systemic inflammation, and release of tumour‐derived pro‐cachectic factors). Absence of RAGE in mice translates into reduced serum levels of cachexia‐inducing factors, delayed loss of muscle mass and strength, reduced tumour progression, and increased survival.ConclusionsRAGE is a molecular determinant in inducing the hallmarks of cancer cachexia, and molecular targeting of RAGE might represent a therapeutic strategy to prevent or counteract the cachectic syndrome.
Highlights
The results described point to a previously unravelled role of RAGE as a major player underpinning all hallmarks of cachexia under cancer conditions, that is, loss of body weight and muscle mass, systemic inflammation, and release of tumour-derived cachexia-inducing factors
RAGE, which is absent in adult healthy muscle,[21] is reexpressed in atrophying myofibers via p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) under the action of proinflammatory cytokines and elevated serum levels of S100 calcium-binding protein B (S100B) and high mobility group box 1 (HMGB1), released from tumour cells
Muscle regeneration is highly compromised in cachexia conditions, and proliferating Pax7+ve cells are unable to terminally differentiate and fuse into myofibers because they are prevented by tumourderived factors influencing the muscle microenvironment
Summary
Cachexia is a highly debilitating multifactorial syndrome affecting more than 50% of patients with advanced cancer, especially lung and upper-gastrointestinal cancer. The major clinical feature of cachexia is skeletal muscle atrophy that leads to pronounced weight loss, drastically dampened patients’ quality of life, reduced response and tolerance to chemotherapy, and poor prognosis and outcome.[1,2]. Systemic inflammation is thought to be a major mediator of muscle wasting in individuals affected by cancer. A multifactorial syndrome affecting more than 50% of patients with advanced cancer and responsible for ~20% of cancer-associated deaths, is still a poorly understood process without a standard cure available. Skeletal muscle atrophy caused by systemic inflammation is a major clinical feature of cachexia, leading to weight loss, dampening patients’ quality of life, and reducing patients’ response to anticancer therapy. RAGE (receptor for advanced glycation end-products) is a multiligand receptor of the immunoglobulin superfamily and a mediator of muscle regeneration, inflammation, and cancer
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