Pro-protein convertases such as furin are expressed in many human tumor lines and primary tumors. Furin processes stromelysin-3, membrane type 1 matrix metalloproteinase (MMPs) involved in tumor cell invasiveness, as well as growth factors such as transforming growth factor 1. Evaluation of furin expression in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) cells exhibiting different invasive ability showed that furin overexpression correlated with their respective invasiveness. The use of a selective furin inhibitor, alpha 1-PDX (PDX) was studied in three furin-expressing invasive HNSCC cell lines. The effects of PDX transfection were evaluated in vivo and in vitro to determine changes in the malignant phenotype. Transfection of HNSCC cell lines with PDX resulted in significant decrease or absence of tumorigenicity after s.c. inoculation into severe combined immunodeficient mice. Likewise, in vitro invasiveness was reduced Ϸ50%. The in vivo invasion assay using tracheal xenotransplants showed even more drastic reductions of the invasive ability of PDX-transfected cells (up to an 80% decrease). PDX-transfected cells did not invade or penetrated less into the tracheal wall tissues than their vector alone-transfected counterparts. In addition, the former cells showed a remarkable decrease in MMP-2 processing and activity. After PDX transfection the cells were less efficient in processing the tumor progressionassociated furin substrates transforming growth factor 1 and pro-membrane type 1-MMP. These findings indicate that furin inhibition is a feasible approach to attenuate and even abolish certain critical attributes of the advanced malignant phenotype. Thus, furin should be considered as a promising target for cancer therapy.alpha1-PDX ͉ squamous cell carcinoma ͉ invasion ͉ tumor progression
Pro-protein convertases (PCs) are proteases that recognize and cleave precursor proteins. Furin, a well-studied PC, is ubiquitously expressed, and it has been implicated in many physiological and pathological processes. Some substrates for furin, such as membrane type 1 (MT1) matrix metalloproteinase (MMP), an MMP that activates gelatinase, a collagen-degrading enzyme, are associated with the advanced malignant phenotype. This report examines the expression of furin in carcinoma cell lines of different invasive ability. The levels of furin mRNA and protein correlated with the aggressiveness of tumor cell lines derived from head and neck and lung cancers. Furin expression also was investigated in primary head and neck squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCCs). Furin mRNA was not detected in nonmetastasizing carcinomas. In contrast, furin mRNA was expressed in metastasizing HNSCCs. Immunohistochemistry and Western blot analysis confirmed these results at the protein level. Furin activity was investigated indirectly by evaluating the expression of the pro-form and the processed form of MT1-MMP. Metastasizing HNSCCs showed increased expression of MT1-MMP. Furthermore, pro-MT1-MMP expression was noted in most of the nonmetastasizing HNSCCs analyzed by Western blot, and it was absent in the metastasizing HNSCCs. This finding suggests a lower level of furin-mediated MT1-MMP activation in the less aggressive cancers. These observations indicate that furin plays a role in tumor progression. Its overexpression in more aggressive or metastasizing cancers resulted in increased MMP processing.
Many proteins are synthesized as inactive proforms requiring a proteolytic processing to render them active. A variety of proteases catalyze these cleavage reactions. Proprotein convertases are a family of serine proteases capable of activating substrates that will subsequently intervene in extracellular matrix (ECM) degradation, cell growth, differentiation and viral pathogenesis. Furin, the prototype of this family, has been implicated in many physiological and pathological processes. Some of its substrates such as TGF-, MT-MMP's, and IGFR-1 have been identified. Overexpression of furin has been observed in several human tumors. In this report we demonstrate that overexpression of furin causes a significant increase in the invasive potential of human tumor cells of low and moderate aggressive potential in vitro and in vivo. SCC12 and SCC15 were transfected with furin cDNA, resulting in efficient processing of furin substrates. An in vivo invasion assay showed enhancement of invasive ability. Inhibition of furin activity with the synthetic inhibitor decanoyl-Arg-Val-Lys-Argchloromethyl-ketone, CMK, showed a significant decrease in both processing and in vitro invasiveness. A moderate enhancement in proliferation rate was observed when cells were transfected with furin. CMK treatment resulted in a marked reduction of this effect. Tumors obtained after subcutaneous (s.c.) inoculation of furin-overexpressing cells were larger and developed earlier than the controls. Furin overexpression caused an imbalance in the activation of invasion and proliferation-related substrates leading to the acquisition of an advanced malignant phenotype. In addition, inhibition of furin activity decreases substrate activation, proliferation rate, and invasive potential of cancer cells, suggesting that furin is a potentially useful target for therapeutics.
Processing of latent precursor proteins by proprotein convertases (PCs) into their biologically active products is a common mechanism required for many important biologic functions. This process is tightly regulated, leading to the generation of active peptides and proteins including neuropeptides and polypeptide hormones, protein tyrosine phosphatases, growth factors and their receptors, and enzymes including matrix metalloproteases (MMPs). These processing reactions occurs at pairs of basic amino acids. Within the past several years, a novel family of Ca2+‐dependent serine proteases has been identified, all of which possess homology to the endoproteases subtilisin (bacteria) and kexin (yeast). This family of PCs is currently comprised of fewer than a dozen members, known as furin/paired basic amino‐acid–cleaving enzyme (PACE), PC1/PC3, PC2, PC4, PACE4, PC5/PC6, and PC7/PC8/lymphoma proprotein convertase. They share a high degree of amino‐acid identity of 50–75% within their catalytic domains. Despite the relatively high degree of homology in the PC family, only PACE4 and furin localize to the same chromosome: mouse chromosome 7 and human chromosome 15. Recent reports have supported a possible functional role for PCs in tumorigenesis. For instance, convertases have been shown to be expressed in various tumor lines and human primary tumors. Furin and PACE4 process stromelysin 3 (MMP‐11 or Str‐3), an MMP involved in tumor invasion, into its mature, active form. Similarly, a growing family of MMPs, known as membrane‐type metalloproteinases (MT‐MMPs), and growth factors and adhesion molecules such as E‐cadherin show similar amino‐acid motifs and thus could be activated by furin and PACE4. These data, taken together with the high expression levels of PACE4 in 50% of murine chemically induced spindle cell tumors, confer to PACE4 and possibly other PCs a possible functional role in the activation of MMPs and consequently in tumor cell invasion and tumor progression. This was further supported by the remarkable enhancement in the invasive ability of the PACE4‐transfected murine tumor cell lines. Mol. Carcinog. 28:63–69, 2000. © 2000 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
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