阿米洛利通过抑制肿瘤源性外泌体释放改善癌症恶病质中的肌肉萎缩。

IF 5.3 2区 医学 Q2 CELL BIOLOGY
Lin Zhou, Tong Zhang, Wei Shao, Ruohan Lu, Lin Wang, Haisheng Liu, Bin Jiang, Shiqin Li, Huiqin Zhuo, Suheng Wang, Qinxi Li, Caihua Huang, Donghai Lin
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引用次数: 21

摘要

背景:癌症恶病质(CAC)降低患者的生存和生活质量。对CAC的治疗需要有效的治疗策略的发展。这一长期过程可以通过药物重新定位的方法来缩短,这种方法利用了已批准用于非恶病质疾病的旧药物。阿米洛利是一种利尿剂,临床上用于治疗高血压和心力衰竭引起的水肿。在这里,我们探讨了阿米洛利治疗对改善癌症恶病质小鼠模型肌肉萎缩的影响。方法:小鼠皮下注射CT26和LLC肿瘤细胞,分别诱导结肠癌恶病质和肺癌恶病质。一旦肿瘤形成,每天腹腔注射阿米洛利。CT26模型和LLC模型的恶病质特征分别通过表型、组织病理学和生化分析进行表征。定量分析血浆外泌体和肌肉萎缩相关蛋白。研究人员进行了基于核磁共振的代谢组学和转录组学综合分析,以确定腓肠肌中显著改变的代谢途径和明显改变的代谢相关生物学过程。结果:CT26和LLC恶病质模型表现出明显的恶病质特征,包括体重、骨骼肌、脂肪组织和肌肉力量的减少。在不影响肿瘤生长的情况下,阿米洛利明显减轻荷瘤小鼠的肌肉萎缩和恶病质相关特征。CT26和LLC恶病质小鼠均显示血浆外泌体密度增加,其主要来源于肿瘤。值得注意的是,阿米洛利治疗抑制肿瘤来源的外泌体释放,对正常健康小鼠非肿瘤组织的外泌体分泌没有明显影响,也没有引起可观察到的全身毒性。整合组学显示,恶病质腓肠肌存在显著的代谢损伤,包括促进肌肉分解代谢、抑制肌肉蛋白质合成、阻断糖酵解和阻碍酮体氧化。阿米洛利治疗能明显改善病毒性腓肠肌代谢障碍。结论:阿米洛利通过抑制肿瘤源性外泌体释放,改善恶病质肌萎缩,缓解癌症恶病质进展。我们的结果有助于理解潜在的分子机制,揭示阿米洛利在恶病质治疗中的潜力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Amiloride ameliorates muscle wasting in cancer cachexia through inhibiting tumor-derived exosome release.

Background: Cancer cachexia (CAC) reduces patient survival and quality of life. Developments of efficient therapeutic strategies are required for the CAC treatments. This long-term process could be shortened by the drug-repositioning approach which exploits old drugs approved for non-cachexia disease. Amiloride, a diuretic drug, is clinically used for treatments of hypertension and edema due to heart failure. Here, we explored the effects of the amiloride treatment for ameliorating muscle wasting in murine models of cancer cachexia.

Methods: The CT26 and LLC tumor cells were subcutaneously injected into mice to induce colon cancer cachexia and lung cancer cachexia, respectively. Amiloride was intraperitoneally injected daily once tumors were formed. Cachexia features of the CT26 model and the LLC model were separately characterized by phenotypic, histopathologic and biochemical analyses. Plasma exosomes and muscle atrophy-related proteins were quantitatively analyzed. Integrative NMR-based metabolomic and transcriptomic analyses were conducted to identify significantly altered metabolic pathways and distinctly changed metabolism-related biological processes in gastrocnemius.

Results: The CT26 and LLC cachexia models displayed prominent cachexia features including decreases in body weight, skeletal muscle, adipose tissue, and muscle strength. The amiloride treatment in tumor-bearing mice distinctly alleviated muscle atrophy and relieved cachexia-related features without affecting tumor growth. Both the CT26 and LLC cachexia mice showed increased plasma exosome densities which were largely derived from tumors. Significantly, the amiloride treatment inhibited tumor-derived exosome release, which did not obviously affect exosome secretion from non-neoplastic tissues or induce observable systemic toxicities in normal healthy mice. Integrative-omics revealed significant metabolic impairments in cachectic gastrocnemius, including promoted muscular catabolism, inhibited muscular protein synthesis, blocked glycolysis, and impeded ketone body oxidation. The amiloride treatment evidently improved the metabolic impairments in cachectic gastrocnemius.

Conclusions: Amiloride ameliorates cachectic muscle wasting and alleviates cancer cachexia progression through inhibiting tumor-derived exosome release. Our results are beneficial to understanding the underlying molecular mechanisms, shedding light on the potentials of amiloride in cachexia therapy.

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来源期刊
Skeletal Muscle
Skeletal Muscle CELL BIOLOGY-
CiteScore
9.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
25
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: The only open access journal in its field, Skeletal Muscle publishes novel, cutting-edge research and technological advancements that investigate the molecular mechanisms underlying the biology of skeletal muscle. Reflecting the breadth of research in this area, the journal welcomes manuscripts about the development, metabolism, the regulation of mass and function, aging, degeneration, dystrophy and regeneration of skeletal muscle, with an emphasis on understanding adult skeletal muscle, its maintenance, and its interactions with non-muscle cell types and regulatory modulators. Main areas of interest include: -differentiation of skeletal muscle- atrophy and hypertrophy of skeletal muscle- aging of skeletal muscle- regeneration and degeneration of skeletal muscle- biology of satellite and satellite-like cells- dystrophic degeneration of skeletal muscle- energy and glucose homeostasis in skeletal muscle- non-dystrophic genetic diseases of skeletal muscle, such as Spinal Muscular Atrophy and myopathies- maintenance of neuromuscular junctions- roles of ryanodine receptors and calcium signaling in skeletal muscle- roles of nuclear receptors in skeletal muscle- roles of GPCRs and GPCR signaling in skeletal muscle- other relevant aspects of skeletal muscle biology. In addition, articles on translational clinical studies that address molecular and cellular mechanisms of skeletal muscle will be published. Case reports are also encouraged for submission. Skeletal Muscle reflects the breadth of research on skeletal muscle and bridges gaps between diverse areas of science for example cardiac cell biology and neurobiology, which share common features with respect to cell differentiation, excitatory membranes, cell-cell communication, and maintenance. Suitable articles are model and mechanism-driven, and apply statistical principles where appropriate; purely descriptive studies are of lesser interest.
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