Regulation of lung cancer growth and metastasis by an actionable driver of vesicle biogenesis in the Golgi

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R01 · $414,865 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Few effective therapies are available for KRAS-mutant lung cancer (KMLC). To address this problem, we seek to elucidate the biological basis for KMLC growth and metastasis and to develop novel therapies on the basis of that improved understanding. Cancer cells secrete factors that promote tumor growth, matrix remodeling, angiogenesis, and inflammation, a process hereafter termed “malignant secretion”. Therapeutic strategies to block malignant secretion have not been developed. We have identified a chromosome 1q amplicon harboring and numerous regulators of vesicle biogenesis and trafficking, including phosphatidylinositol 4-kinase IIIβ (PI4KIIIβ), a Golgi-dedicated kinase that generates phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate (PI4P). We show that the viability and proliferative and invasive activities of 1q–amplified KMLC cells require PI4KIIIβ. A selective PI4KIIIβ antagonist preferentially induced apoptosis and inhibited the metastatic properties of 1q–amplified KMLC cells. On the basis of these findings, we hypothesize that high PI4KIIIβ levels promote KMLC growth and metastasis and confer vulnerability to PI4KIIIβ antagonists. To test this hypothesis, we propose in Aim 1 to an autochthonous PI4KIIIβ–expressing KMLC model and determine whether PI4KIIIβ enhances KMLC metastatic propensity and confers vulnerability to PI4KIIIβ antagonists. Our findings will elucidate the way in which PI4KIIIβ drives KMLC progression and may provide a foundation for new therapeutic approaches using PI4KIIIβ antagonists. We show that high PI4KIIIβ levels in 1q–amplified KMLC cells enhanced anterograde vesicular trafficking and stimulated the secretion of pro-survival and pro-metastatic factors. PI4KIIIβ–driven metastatic properties required Golgi phosphoprotein 3 (GOLPH3), a PI4P–tethered Golgi protein that promotes vesicle budding from the trans-Golgi network. Therefore, we postulate that PI4KIIIβ-dependent secretion is required to activate pro- metastatic processes in the tumor microenvironment and maintain the viability of 1q-amplified KMLC cells. To test this hypothesis, we will inactivate Golph3 in PI4KIIIβ-expressing autochthonous KMLCs and 1q-amplified orthotopic KMLCs. Resultant changes in tumor cell viability and inflammatory, stromal, and vascular cell functions in the tumor microenvironment will be measured. We will identify PI4KIIIβ-dependent secreted proteins that mediate these changes and elucidate how they exert these functions. Our findings will provide insight into how a secretory process activated by a chromosomal region that is frequently amplified in cancer maintains tumor cell viability and influences diverse processes in the tumor microenvironment. In summary, the evidence presented here links malignant secretion to a chromosomal region that is frequently amplified in KMLC and provides a basis for clinical studies to develop PI4KIIIβ antagonists as first- in-class inhibitors of malignant secretion. Our findings elucidate the molecular underpinnin...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10358493
Project number
5R01CA236781-03
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF TX MD ANDERSON CAN CTR
Principal Investigator
Jonathan M Kurie
Activity code
R01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2022
Award amount
$414,865
Award type
5
Project period
2019-12-01 → 2024-11-30