AI Article Synopsis

  • Uterine serous cancer (USC) is a highly aggressive form of uterine cancer that often leads to treatment-resistant disease, highlighting the need for new therapies.
  • A novel biomarker, ryanodine receptor 1 (RYR1), was identified as having a negative impact on patient outcomes, prompting researchers to investigate its role in cancer progression and the potential for FDA-approved drugs to target it.
  • The study found that high levels of RYR1 correlate with advanced disease and that inhibiting RYR1 improves cancer cell behaviors, with the repositioned drug dantrolene demonstrating effectiveness in reducing USC progression in models.

Article Abstract

Background: Uterine serous cancer (USC) is the most common non-endometrioid subtype of uterine cancer, and is also the most aggressive. Most patients will die of progressively chemotherapy-resistant disease, and the development of new therapies that can target USC remains a major unmet clinical need. This study sought to determine the molecular mechanism by which a novel unfavorable prognostic biomarker ryanodine receptor 1 (RYR1) identified in advanced USC confers their malignant phenotypes, and demonstrated the efficacy of targeting RYR1 by repositioned FDA-approved compounds in USC treatment.

Methods: TCGA USC dataset was analyzed to identify top genes that are associated with patient survival or disease stage, and can be targeted by FDA-approved compounds. The top gene RYR1 was selected and the functional role of RYR1 in USC progression was determined by silencing and over-expressing RYR1 in USC cells in vitro and in vivo. The molecular mechanism and signaling networks associated with the functional role of RYR1 in USC progression were determined by reverse phase protein arrays (RPPA), Western blot, and transcriptomic profiling analyses. The efficacy of the repositioned compound dantrolene on USC progression was determined using both in vitro and in vivo models.

Results: High expression level of RYR1 in the tumors is associated with advanced stage of the disease. Inhibition of RYR1 suppressed proliferation, migration and enhanced apoptosis through Ca-dependent activation of AKT/CREB/PGC-1α and AKT/HK1/2 signaling pathways, which modulate mitochondrial bioenergetics properties, including oxidative phosphorylation, ATP production, mitochondrial membrane potential, ROS production and TCA metabolites, and glycolytic activities in USC cells. Repositioned compound dantrolene suppressed USC progression and survival in mouse models.

Conclusions: These findings provided insight into the mechanism by which RYR1 modulates the malignant phenotypes of USC and could aid in the development of dantrolene as a repurposed therapeutic agent for the treatment of USC to improve patient survival.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9373370PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13046-022-02419-wDOI Listing

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