The triacylglycerol, hydroxytriolein, inhibits triple negative mammary breast cancer cell proliferation through a mechanism dependent on dihydroceramide and Akt
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Date
2019-04-02Author
Guardiola-Serrano, Francisca
Rodríguez-Lorca, Raquel
Terés, Silvia
Alonso-Sande, María
Higuera Urbano, Monica
Torres, Manuel
Escriba, Pablo V.
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Oncotarget 10(26) : 2486-2507 (2019)
Abstract
The plasma membrane is an attractive target for new anticancer drugs, not
least because regulating its lipid structure can control multiple signaling pathways
involved in cancer cell proliferation, differentiation and survival. Accordingly, the novel
anticancer drug hydroxytriolein (HTO) was designed to interact with and regulate the
composition and structure of the membrane, which in turn controls the interaction of
amphitropic signaling membrane proteins with the lipid bilayer. Changes in signaling
provoked by HTO impair the growth of triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) cells,
aggressive breast tumor cells that have a worse prognosis than other types of breast
cancers and for which there is as yet no effective targeted therapy. HTO alters the
lipid composition and structure of cancer cell membranes, inhibiting the growth of
MDA-MB-231 and BT-549 TNBC cells in vitro. Depending on the cellular context, HTO
could regulate two pathways involved in TNBC cell proliferation. On the one hand, HTO
might stimulate ERK signaling and induce TNBC cell autophagy, while on the other,
it could increase dihydroceramide and ceramide production, which would inhibit Akt
independently of EGFR activation and provoke cell death. In vivo studies using a model
of human TNBC show that HTO and its fatty acid constituent (2-hydroxyoleic acid)
impair tumor growth, with no undesired side effects. For these reasons, HTO appears
to be a promising anticancer molecule that targets the lipid bilayer (membrane-lipid
therapy). By regulating membrane lipids, HTO controls important signaling pathways
involved in cancer cell growth, the basis of its pharmacological efficacy and safety.