AI Article Synopsis

  • - Endometrial cancer is a common gynecological cancer that can be difficult to treat, especially in cases where the disease recurs or spreads; cancer stem cells (CSCs) are linked to these challenges, particularly through their high activity of the enzyme aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH).
  • - The study investigated the effects of inhibiting ALDH in endometrial CSCs using a specific compound (DEAB), which was shown to significantly reduce ALDH activity, inhibit cell growth capabilities, and alter protein expression profiles related to cancer progression.
  • - Findings suggest that targeting ALDH and related proteins (like ALDH18A1, SdhA, and UBAP2L) could provide new therapeutic strategies

Article Abstract

Endometrial cancer is one of the most common gynaecological malignancies. Although often diagnosed at an early stage, there is a subset of patients with recurrent and metastatic disease for whom current treatments are not effective. Cancer stem cells (CSCs) play a pivotal role in triggering tumorigenesis, disease progression, recurrence, and metastasis, as high aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) activity is associated with invasiveness and chemotherapy resistance. Therefore, this study aimed to evaluate the effects of ALDH inhibition in endometrial CSCs. ECC-1 and RL95-2 cells were submitted to a sphere-forming protocol to obtain endometrial CSCs. ALDH inhibition was evaluated through ALDH activity and expression, sphere-forming capacity, self-renewal, projection area, and CD133, CD44, CD24, and P53 expression. A mass spectrometry-based proteomic study was performed to determine the proteomic profile of endometrial cancer cells upon N,N-diethylaminobenzaldehyde (DEAB). DEAB reduced ALDH activity and expression, along with a significant decrease in sphere-forming capacity and projection area, with increased CD133 expression. Additionally, DEAB modulated P53 expression. Endometrial cancer cells display a distinct proteomic profile upon DEAB, sharing 75 up-regulated and 30 down-regulated proteins. In conclusion, DEAB inhibits ALDH activity and expression, influencing endometrial CSC phenotype. Furthermore, ALDH18A1, SdhA, and UBAP2L should be explored as novel molecular targets for endometrial cancer.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11171353PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers16112031DOI Listing

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