The synthetic retinoid ST1926 as a novel therapeutic agent in rhabdomyosarcoma

Abstract

Rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) is the most frequent soft tissue sarcoma in children. Despite multiple attempts at intensifying chemotherapeutic approaches to treatment, only moderate improvements in survival have been made for patients with advanced disease. Retinoic acid is a differentiation agent that has shown some antitumor efficacy in RMS cells in vitro; however, the effects are of low magnitude. E-3-(4′-hydroxyl-3′-adamantylbiphenyl-4-yl) acrylic acid (ST1926) is a novel orally available synthetic atypical retinoid, shown to have more potent activity than retinoic acid in several types of cancer cells. We used in vitro and in vivo models of RMS to explore the efficacy of ST1926 as a possible therapeutic agent in this sarcoma. We found that ST1926 reduced RMS cell viability in all tested alveolar (ARMS) and embryonal (ERMS) RMS cell lines, at readily achievable micromolar concentrations in mice. ST1926 induced an early DNA damage response (DDR), which led to increase in apoptosis, in addition to S-phase cell cycle arrest and a reduction in protein levels of the cell cycle kinase CDK1. Effects were irrespective of TP53 mutational status. Interestingly, in ARMS cells, ST1926 treatment decreased PAX3-FOXO1 fusion oncoprotein levels, and this suppression occurred at a post-transcriptional level. In vivo, ST1926 was effective in inhibiting growth of ARMS and ERMS xenografts, and induced a prominent DDR. We conclude that ST1926 has preclinical efficacy against RMS, and should be further developed in this disease in clinical trials. What's new? Rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) is an aggressive childhood tumor, and new agents are urgently needed to improve outcome, especially in advanced disease. This study shows that ST1926, a synthetic retinoid, is effective against RMS in vitro and in vivo at therapeutically relevant concentrations. ST1926 treatment resulted in reduced RMS cell viability and significantly delayed tumor growth in mice, actions that stemmed from ST1926 induction of the DNA damage response and S-phase arrest. The effects were independent of TP53 mutation status. ST1926 further decreased levels of the PAX-FOXO1 fusion oncoprotein, a possible player in fusion gene-positive RMS tumor cell invasion. © 2015 UICC.

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Cell cycle, Dna damage, Pax3-foxo1, Retinoids, Rhabdomyosarcoma, St1926, Adamantane, Animals, Antineoplastic agents, Apoptosis, Cell differentiation, Cell line, tumor, Cell survival, Cinnamates, Disease models, animal, Dose-response relationship, drug, Heterografts, Humans, Mice, Oncogene proteins, fusion, S phase cell cycle checkpoints, Signal transduction, Tumor suppressor protein p53, Adarotene, Cell cycle kinase cdk1, Cell protein, Protein p53, Transcription factor fkhr, Transcription factor pax3, Unclassified drug, 3-(4'-hydroxy-3'-adamantylbiphenyl-4-yl)acrylic acid, Antineoplastic agent, Cinnamic acid derivative, Oncoprotein, Animal experiment, Animal model, Antineoplastic activity, Area under the curve, Article, Cancer inhibition, Cell viability, Controlled study, Dose response, Drug efficacy, Drug potency, Human, Human cell, In vitro study, In vivo study, Male, Mouse, Nonhuman, Plasma concentration-time curve, Priority journal, Protein expression, S phase cell cycle checkpoint, Single drug dose, Analogs and derivatives, Animal, Disease model, Drug effects, Genetics, Metabolism, Pathology, Tumor cell line, Xenograft

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