Background & Aims-During colorectal cancer pathogenesis, mutations and epigenetic events cause neoplastic behavior in epithelial cells by deregulating the Wnt, Ras-Raf-ERK, and transforming growth factor (TGF)-β signaling pathways, among others. The TGF-β signaling pathway is often inactivated in colon cancer cells by mutations in the gene encoding the TGF-β receptor TGFBR2. The Ras-Raf-ERK pathway is frequently upregulated in colon cancer via mutational activation of KRAS or BRAF. We assessed how these pathways interact in vivo and affect formation of colorectal tumors.
The accumulation of genetic and epigenetic alterations mediates colorectal cancer (CRC) formation by deregulating key signaling pathways in cancer cells. In CRC, one of the most commonly inactivated signaling pathways is the transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-β) signaling pathway, which is often inactivated by mutations of TGF-β type II receptor (TGFBR2). Another commonly deregulated pathway in CRC is the phosphoinositide-3-kinase (PI3K)-AKT pathway. Phosphatase and tensin homolog deleted on chromosome 10 (PTEN) is an important negative regulator of PI3K-AKT signaling and is silenced in approximately 30% of CRC. The combination of TGFBR2 inactivation and loss of PTEN is particularly common in microsatellite unstable CRCs. Consequently, we determined in vivo if deregulation of these two pathways cooperate to affect CRC formation by analyzing tumors arising in mice that lack Tgfbr2 and/or Pten specifically in the intestinal epithelium. We found that lack of Tgfbr2 (Tgfbr2IEKO) alone is not sufficient for intestinal tumor formation and lack of Pten (PtenIEKO) alone had a weak effect on intestinal tumor induction. However, the combination of Tgfbr2 inactivation with Pten loss (PtenIEKO;Tgfbr2IEKO) led to malignant tumors in both the small intestine and colon in 86.0% of the mice and to metastases in 8.1% of the tumor-bearing mice. Moreover, these tumors arose via a β-catenin independent mechanism. Inactivation of Tgf-β signaling and loss of Pten led to increased cell proliferation, decreased apoptosis, and decreased expression of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors. Thus, inactivation of TGF-β signaling and loss of PTEN cooperate to drive intestinal cancer formation and progression by suppressing cell cycle inhibitors.
We have previously shown that protein prenylation occurs in the Trypanosomatids Trypanosoma brucei (T. brucei), Trypanosoma cruzi, and Leishmania mexicana and that protein farnesyltransferase (PFT) activity can be detected in cytosolic extracts of insect (procyclic) form T. brucei. A PFT that transfers the farnesyl group from farnesyl pyrophosphate to a cysteine that is 4 residues upstream of the C terminus of the Ras GTP-binding protein RAS1-CVIM has now been purified 60,000-fold to near homogeneity from procyclic T. brucei. By screening a mixture of hexapeptides SSCALX (X is 20 different amino acids), it was found that SSCALM binds to T. brucei PFT with sub-micromolar affinity, and affinity chromatography using this peptide was a key step in the purification of this enzyme. On SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, the enzyme migrates as a pair of bands with apparent molecular masses of 61 and 65 kDa, and thus its subunits are ϳ30% larger than those of the mammalian homolog. The 61-kDa band was identified as the putative -subunit by photoaffinity labeling with a 32 P-labeled analog of farnesyl pyrophosphate. Mimetics of the C-terminal tetrapeptide of prenyl acceptors have been previously shown to inhibit mammalian PFT, and these compounds also inhibit T. brucei PFT with affinities in the nanomolar to micromolar range, although the structure-activity relationship is very different for parasite versus mammalian enzyme. Unlike mammalian cells, the growth of bloodstream T. brucei is completely inhibited by low micromolar concentrations of two of the PFT inhibitors, and these compounds also block protein farnesylation in cultured parasites. These compounds also potently block the growth of the intracellular (amastigote) form of T. cruzi grown in fibroblast host cells. The results suggest that protein farnesylation is a target for the development of anti-trypanosomatid chemotherapeutics.
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