Rapamycin inhibits lung metastasis of B16 melanoma cells through down‐regulating alphav integrin expression and up‐regulating apoptosis signaling |
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Authors: | Zhuoshun Yang Zhang Lei Bo Li Yu Zhou Gui‐Mei Zhang Zuo‐Hua Feng Biao Zhang Guan‐Xin Shen Bo Huang |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology;2. Department of Immunology, Tongji Medical College, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan, China |
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Abstract: | Currently available data indicate the potential application of rapamycin and its analogues in the clinic as anticancer therapeutic agents through inhibiting tumor cell growth and tumor angiogenesis. However, whether rapamycin can directly suppress tumor metastasis remains unclear. In the present study, we demonstrated that rapamycin treatment results in reduced formation of metastatic nodules in the lung by B16 cells. This is due to two mechanisms. First, the expression of αv integrin is down‐regulated by rapamycin treatment, and subsequently, the phosphorylation of focal adhesion kinase (FAK) is reduced. Second, rapamycin promotes apoptosis by up‐regulating the proapoptotic molecules Bid and Bax and down‐regulating Bcl‐xL. Blocking the apoptosis pathway by pan‐caspase inhibitor zVAD partially reversed the suppression of rapamycin in B16 metastasis. Interestingly, rapamycin up‐regulates Bax and Bid in B16 cells via the S6K1 pathway and down‐regulates the expression of αv integrin via other pathway(s). In addition, our data showed that autophagy was not involved in the mechanisms of rapamycin‐mediated metastasis suppression. Our findings demonstrate a potential anti‐metastatic effect of rapamycin via down‐regulating αv integrin expression and up‐regulating apoptosis signaling, suggesting that rapamycin might be worthy of clinical evaluation as an antimetastatic agent. (Cancer Sci 2009) |
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