An orally bioavailable small-molecule inhibitor of Hedgehog signaling inhibits tumor initiation and metastasis in pancreatic cancer
- 1 September 2008
- journal article
- Published by American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) in Molecular Cancer Therapeutics
- Vol. 7 (9) , 2725-2735
- https://doi.org/10.1158/1535-7163.mct-08-0573
Abstract
Recent evidence suggests that blockade of aberrant Hedgehog signaling can be exploited as a therapeutic strategy for pancreatic cancer. Our previous studies using the prototype Hedgehog small-molecule antagonist cyclopamine had shown the striking inhibition of systemic metastases on Hedgehog blockade in spontaneously metastatic orthotopic xenograft models. Cyclopamine is a natural compound with suboptimal pharmacokinetics, which impedes clinical translation. In the present study, a novel, orally bioavailable small-molecule Hedgehog inhibitor, IPI-269609, was tested using in vitro and in vivo model systems. In vitro treatment of pancreatic cancer cell lines with IPI-269609 resembled effects observed using cyclopamine (i.e., Gli-responsive reporter knockdown, down-regulation of the Hedgehog target genes Gli1 and Ptch, as well as abrogation of cell migration and colony formation in soft agar). Single-agent IPI-269609 profoundly inhibited systemic metastases in orthotopic xenografts established from human pancreatic cancer cell lines, although Hedgehog blockade had minimal effect on primary tumor volume. The only discernible phenotype observed within the treated primary tumor was a significant reduction in the population of aldehyde dehydrogenase–bright cells, which we have previously identified as a clonogenic tumor-initiating population in pancreatic cancer. Selective ex vivo depletion of aldehyde dehydrogenase–bright cells with IPI-269609 was accompanied by significant reduction in tumor engraftment rates in athymic mice. Pharmacologic blockade of aberrant Hedgehog signaling might prove to be an effective therapeutic strategy for inhibition of systemic metastases in pancreatic cancer, likely through targeting subsets of cancer cells with tumor-initiating (“cancer stem cell”) properties. [Mol Cancer Ther 2008;7(9):2725–35]Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Hedgehog Drugs Begin To Show ResultsJNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 2008
- Dose- and Route-Dependent Teratogenicity, Toxicity, and Pharmacokinetic Profiles of the Hedgehog Signaling Antagonist Cyclopamine in the MouseToxicological Sciences, 2008
- Guidelines for the Surgical Management of Pancreatic AdenocarcinomaSeminars in Oncology, 2007
- Cyclopamine-Mediated Hedgehog Pathway Inhibition Depletes Stem-Like Cancer Cells in GlioblastomaThe International Journal of Cell Cloning, 2007
- Medical treatment of pancreatic cancerExpert Review of Anticancer Therapy, 2007
- Targeted therapy for cancer stem cells: the patched pathway and ABC transportersOncogene, 2007
- Hedgehog is an early and late mediator of pancreatic cancer tumorigenesisNature, 2003
- Widespread requirement for Hedgehog ligand stimulation in growth of digestive tract tumoursNature, 2003
- Identification of a small molecule inhibitor of the hedgehog signaling pathway: Effects on basal cell carcinoma-like lesionsProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2003
- Effects of oncogenic mutations in Smoothened and Patched can be reversed by cyclopamineNature, 2000