Adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) is a rare aggressive malignancy with a poor outcome largely due to limited treatment options. Here, we propose a novel therapeutic approach through modulating intracellular free cholesterol via the liver X receptor alpha (LXRα) in combination with current first-line pharmacotherapy, mitotane. H295R and MUC-1 ACC cell lines were pretreated with LXRα inhibitors in combination with mitotane. In H295R, mitotane (20, 40 and 50 µM) induced dose-dependent cell death; however, in MUC-1, this only occurred at a supratherapeutic concentration (200 µM). LXRα inhibition potentiated mitotane-induced cytotoxicity in both cell lines. This was confirmed through use of the CompuSyn model which showed moderate pharmacological synergism and was indicative of apoptotic cell death via an increase in annexinV and cleaved-caspase 3 expression. Inhibition of LXRα was confirmed through downregulation of cholesterol efflux pumps ABCA1 and ABCG1; however, combination treatment with mitotane attenuated this effect. Intracellular free-cholesterol levels were associated with increased cytotoxicity in H295R (r2 = 0.5210) and MUC-1 (r2 = 0.9299) cells. While both cell lines exhibited similar levels of free cholesterol at baseline, H295R were cholesterol ester rich, whereas MUC-1 were cholesterol ester poor. We highlight the importance of LXRα mediated cholesterol metabolism in the management of ACC, drawing attention to its role in the therapeutics of mitotane sensitive tumours. We also demonstrate significant differences in cholesterol storage between mitotane sensitive and resistant disease.
Aging is a carcinogen that markedly increases cancer risk, yet we have limited mechanistic understanding of cancer initiation in aged cells. Here, we demonstrate induction of the hallmark aging process cellular senescence, triggered by loss of Wnt inhibitor ZNRF3, remodels the tissue microenvironment and ultimately permits metastatic adrenal cancer. Detailed characterization reveals a striking sexual dimorphism. Males exhibit earlier senescence activation and a greater innate immune response. This results in high myeloid cell accumulation and lower incidence of malignancy. Conversely, females present a dampened immune response and are more prone to metastatic cancer. Senescence-recruited myeloid cells become increasingly depleted with advanced tumor progression, which is recapitulated in patients where a low myeloid signature is associated with worse outcome. Collectively, our study reveals a novel role for myeloid cells in restraining adrenal cancer progression with significant prognostic value, and provides a model for interrogating pleiotropic effects of cellular senescence in cancer.Graphical abstract created with BioRender.com
Introduction Adrenocortical Carcinoma (ACC) is a rare aggressive cancer with low overall survival. Adjuvant mitotane improves survival but is limited by poor response rates and resistance. Mitotane’s efficacy is attributed to the accumulation of toxic free-cholesterol, predominantly through cholesterol storage inhibition. However, targeting this pathway has proven unsuccessful. We hypothesize that mitotane-induced free-cholesterol accumulation is also mediated through enhanced breakdown of lipid droplets. Methodology ATCC-H295R (mitotane-sensitive) and MUC-1 (mitotane-resistant) ACC cells were evaluated for lipid content using specific BODIPY dyes. Protein expression was evaluated by immunoblotting and flow cytometry. Cell viability was measured by quantifying propidium iodide positive cells following mitotane treatment and pharmacological inhibitors of lipolysis. Results H295R and MUC-1 cells demonstrated similar neutral lipid droplet numbers at baseline. However, evaluation of lipid machinery demonstrated distinct profiles in each model. Analysis of intracellular lipid droplet content showed H295R preferentially store cholesteryl esters, while MUC-1 store triacylglycerol. Decreased lipid droplets were associated with increased lipolysis in H295R and in MUC-1 at toxic mitotane concentrations. Pharmacological inhibition of lipolysis attenuated mitotane-induced toxicity in both models. Conclusion We highlight that lipid droplet breakdown, and activation of lipolysis represents a putative additional mechanism for mitotane-induced cytotoxicity in ACC. Further understanding of cholesterol and lipids in ACC offers potential novel therapeutic exploitation, especially in mitotane-resistant disease.
Introduction: Adrenocortical Carcinoma (ACC) is a rare aggressive cancer which carries a poor prognosis. Adjuvant mitotane improves survival but is limited by poor response rates and resistance following tumour recurrence. Mitotane’s efficacy has been attributed to intracellular accumulation of toxic free cholesterol (FC) predominantly through inhibition of cholesterol storage through SOAT1. Yet SOAT1 specific inhibitors demonstrate inferior efficacy to mitotane in inducing ACC cell death. We hypothesize that mitotane’s efficacy to induce toxic FC accumulation in ACC cells is also mediated through enhanced breakdown of stored cholesterol within intracellular lipid droplets (LDs). Methodology: ATCC-H295R (mitotane sensitive) and MUC-1 (mitotane resistant) ACC cells were evaluated for neutral lipid content using BODIPY493/503 under baseline and cholesterol loaded conditions using Amnis ImageStream, additionally cells were treated with mitotane (H295R - 20, 40, 50µM; MUC1 - 50, 100, 200µM) for 6hr. Analysis of LDs using CE-BODIPY and FA-BODIPY identified cholesterol ester (CE) and triacylglycerol (TAG)-containing LDs, respectively. Lipid droplet-associated proteins (LDAPs) Perilipin (PLIN) 1–4 and hormone sensitive lipase (HSL) were evaluated using western blotting and PCR. Lipid uptake receptors; SRB1, LDLR, LRP1 and CD36 were measured by flow cytometry. Results: Mitotane treatment, within therapeutic range, decreased staining for LDs significantly in H295R. This was also reflected by decreased expression of LDAPs, PLIN1 and PLIN3. The decrease in H295R LDs was associated with increased activation of HSL (pHSL and LIPE). However, this effect was only evident in MUC-1 at supratherapeutic mitotane (200µM). H295R and MUC-1 demonstrated similar overall LD numbers at baseline and under cholesterol supplementation. Expression of PLIN3 was high in both cell lines, while PLIN1, PLIN2 and PLIN4 demonstrated distinct LD profiles in each. Investigation of LD content showed that H295R preferentially store CEs while MUC-1 store only TAG, irrespective of cholesterol-loading. Mitotane treatment significantly reduces both CE and TAG LDs in H295R and MUC-1. Expression of lipid uptake receptors also demonstrated significant variability between cell lines including SRB1 and LRP1. Conclusion: We highlight that lipolysis through LD breakdown and activation of HSL represents a putative additional mechanism for mitotane induced FC cytotoxicity in ACC. We also demonstrate significant differences in cholesterol handling and LDAPs between mitotane sensitive and mitotane resistant models, in particular, the absence of CE LDs in MUC-1. We therefore propose a mechanism of resistance to mitotane through absent CE storage. Further understanding of cholesterol and lipid handling in ACC offers novel therapeutic exploitation, especially in the setting of mitotane resistant disease.
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