Antisecretive and Antitumor Activity of Abiraterone Acetate in Human Adrenocortical Cancer: A Preclinical Study
Chiara Fiorentini1#, Martina Fragni1#, Paola Perego2, Sara Vezzoli1, Sara A. Bonini1, Monica Tortoreto2, Diego Galli1, Melanie Claps3, Guido A. Tiberio4, Massimo Terzolo5, Cristina Missale1, Maurizio Memo1, Giuseppe Procopio6, Nadia Zaffaroni2, Alfredo Berruti3*, Sandra Sigala1
1 Section of Pharmacology, Department of Molecular and Translational Medicine, University of Brescia, V.le Europa 11, 25123 Brescia, Italy; 2 Molecular Pharmacology Unit, Fondazione IRCCS Istituto Nazionale dei Tumori, Via Amadeo 42, 20133 Milan, Italy; 3 Oncology Unit, Department of Medical and Surgical Specialties, Radiological Sciences, and Public Health, University of Brescia and ASST Spedali Civili di Brescia, P.le Spedali Civili 1, 25123 Brescia, Italy; 4 Surgical Clinic, Department of Clinical and Experimental Sciences, University of Brescia and ASST Spedali Civili di Brescia, P.le Spedali Civili 1, 25123 Brescia, Italy, 5 Internal Medicine 1, Department of Clinical and Biological Sciences, University of Turin, San Luigi Gonzaga Hospital, Regione Gonzole 10, 10043 Orbassano, Italy; 6 Medical Oncology I, Genitourinary Unit, Fondazione IRCCS Istituto Nazionale dei Tumori, Via Venezian 1, 20133 Milan, Italy
Context: Patients with adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) frequently suffer from cortisol excess, which portends a negative prognosis. Rapid control of cortisol hypersecretion and tumor growth are the main goals of ACC therapy. Abiraterone acetate (AA) is a potent inhibitor of 17alpha-hydroxylase/ 17,20-lyase, a key enzyme of adrenal steroidogenesis.
Objective: To investigate the therapeutic use of AA in preclinical models of ACC.
Design: AA antisecretive and antiproliferative effects were investigated in vitro using NCI-H295R and SW13 ACC cell lines and human primary ACC cell cultures, as well as in vivo using immuno- deficient mice.
Methods: Steroid secretion, cell viability and proliferation were analyzed in untreated and AA- treated ACC cells. The ability of AA to affect the Wnt/beta-catenin pathway in NCI-H295R cells was also analyzed. Progesterone receptor (PgR) gene was silenced by the RNA interference approach. The antitumor efficacy of AA was confirmed in vivo in NCI-H295R cells xenografted in immuno- deficient mice.
Results: AA reduced the secretion of both cortisol and androgens, increased production of pro- gesterone and induced a concentration-dependent decrease of cell viability in the NCI-H295R cells and primary secreting ACC cultures. AA also reduced beta-catenin nuclear accumulation in NCI- H295R cells. AA administration to NCI-H295R-bearing mice enhanced progesterone levels and inhibited tumor growth. The cytotoxic effect of AA was prevented by either blocking PgR or by gene silencing.
Conclusion: AA is able to inhibit hormone secretion and growth of ACC both in vitro and in vivo. It also reduces beta-catenin nuclear accumulation. The cytotoxic effect of AA appears to require PgR.
Received June 17, 2016. Accepted September 9, 2016.
doi: 10.1210/jc.2016-2414
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A drenocortical carcinoma (ACC), an extremely rare cancer with an incidence of 0.5-2 cases per million population per year (1), is highly malignant and resistant to treatment. A key molecular event that contributes to ACC formation and aggressiveness is the constitutive ac- tivation of the Wnt/ß-catenin signaling pathway due to mutation of the CTNNB1 gene (2, 3). Approximately 50% of ACC in adults are hormone-secreting tumors that produce cortisol (Cushing’s syndrome) or androgen or multiple steroids (4). Cortisol excess negatively influences the outcome of ACC patients with early (5) and advanced stages (6, 7) of disease. The adverse prognosis associated with secreting tumors is due to cortisol-related comorbidi- ties, including hypertension, hypokaliemia, hyperglyce- mia, and infections. Moreover, the immunosuppressive effects of cortisol excess may promote tumor progression (6, 7). Hypertension and hypokaliemia are worsened by cosecretion of steroids with mineralcorticoid activity. Rapid control of hypersecretion is therefore crucial for effective treatment. Surgery with radical intent is the treat- ment of choice, whereas for patients with inoperable met- astatic disease, mitotane alone or in combination with che- motherapy is the reference therapy (1, 8). However, because the efficacy of current medical treatment of ad- vanced ACC is limited, there is an urgent need for new drugs.
Abiraterone acetate (AA) is a potent inhibitor of 17al- pha-hydroxylase/17,20-lyase (CYP17A1), a key enzyme for steroid hormone synthesis (9). Due to its ability to inhibit androgen synthesis by the adrenal gland, AA is effective in metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC), as demonstrated by two large randomized clin-
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ical studies (10, 11). Besides reducing androgen levels, the drug rapidly impairs cortisol synthesis (12); therefore, it could be potentially used in the management of Cushing’s syndrome. AA efficacy in controlling Cushing’s syndrome was recently observed by our group in a ACC patient (13). As compared with other steroid synthesis inhibitors cur- rently used in the treatment of Cushing’s syndrome, AA is less hepatotoxic than ketoconazole, and the concomitant inhibitory effect of cortisol and androgen synthesis is a potential advantage of AA over metyrapone (14), since ACC often cosecretes both hormones.
Abiraterone acetate (AA) is a potent inhibitor of 17al- pha-hydroxylase/17,20-lyase (CYP17A1), a key enzyme for steroid hormone synthesis (9). Due to its ability to inhibit androgen synthesis by the adrenal gland, AA is effective in metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC), as demonstrated by two large randomized clin- ical studies (10, 11). Besides reducing androgen levels, the drug rapidly impairs cortisol synthesis (12); therefore, it could be potentially used in the management of Cushing’s syndrome. AA efficacy in controlling Cushing’s syndrome was recently observed by our group in a ACC patient (13). As compared with other steroid synthesis inhibitors cur- rently used in the treatment of Cushing’s syndrome, AA is less hepatotoxic than ketoconazole, and the concomitant inhibitory effect of cortisol and androgen synthesis is a potential advantage of AA over metyrapone (14), since ACC often cosecretes both hormones.
In the present study, we investigated the effects of AA on hormone secretion and tumor viability in vitro in two established ACC cell lines (NCI-H295R and SW13 (15)) and in ACC primary cultures, and in vivo, in NCI-H295R mouse xenografts.
Materials and Methods
Chemical and reagents. Chemical and reagents are reported in the Supplementary Materials and Methods.
Cell lines. NCI-H295R and SW13 ACC cell lines were obtained from the American Type Culture Collection and cultured as sug- gested by ATCC. Cells were authenticated by the AmpFISTR Identifiler PCR amplification kit (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA, USA).
Primary cell cultures. Human ACC primary cells were derived from two female patients bearing cortisol-secreting tumors (ACC01 and ACC02) and from three patients with non-secret- ing tumors (ACC03, male; ACC06 and ACC08, females) (Sup- plemental Table 1). The project was approved by the local Eth- ical Committee and written informed consent was obtained from all patients. After surgical removal, cells were enzymatically di- gested with collagenase and cultured in the same medium of NCI-H295R cells.
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Cell treatments. Cells were treated with increasing concentra- tions of AA (10-400 nM) for different times in charcoal-dex- tran-treated Nu-Serum (cNS)-medium. For the liquid cromatog- raphy-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) experiments, conditioned media were centrifuged at 1500 x g for 5 minutes at 4℃ and stored at -20℃ until use. NCI-H295R cells were also exposed to mifepristone (0.1-100 nM), with or without AA.
Quantitative RT-PCR (qRT-PCR). Gene expression was evalu- ated by qRT-PCR (iCycler iQ real-time PCR detection system, BioRad Laboratories, Milan, Italy), using SYBR Green as fluo- rochrome, as described elsewhere (16). The sequences of sense and antisense oligonucleotide primers of genes are listed in the supplementary data (Supplemental Table 2).
Cell viability assays. Cell viability was evaluated by cell count- ing, as previously described (17). Cell viability was also deter- mined by 3-(4,5-Dimethyl-2-thiazol)-2,5-diphenyl-2H-tetrazo- lium bromide (MTT) dye reduction assay (18). Briefly, untreated and AA-treated ACC primary cultures and cell lines were incu- bated with MTT dye (5 mg/mL) and solubilized with DMSO. Absorbance was measured by a spectrophotometer at 540/620 nm (GDV, Rome, Italy).
Immunofluorescence. Cells were permeabilized with a solution containing 0.2% Triton X-100 for 60 minutes at room temper- ature and then incubated overnight at 4℃ with antibeta catenin
primary antibody (1:400, Cell Signaling Technologies, Milan, Italy). After extensive washes, the Alexa Fluor488 antirabbit secondary antibody (Life Technologies, Milan, Italy) was ap- plied for 60 minutes at room temperature. For nuclear counter- staining, cells were incubated with Hoechst (Sigma-Aldrich, Mi- lan, Italy) for 5 minutes. Coverslips were mounted using FluorPreserveTM Reagent and cell staining was detected using a Zeiss LSM 510 META confocal laser-scanning microscope (Carl Zeiss AG, Oberkochen, Germany).
PgR gene silencing by RNA interference (RNAi). Two small in- terfering RNA (siRNA) duplexes targeting regions of two iso- forms of the PgR (PgRA and PgRB) gene (si-PgR) and a nontar- geting negative control siRNA duplex were used (Silencer® Select Pre-Designed siRNAs, LifeTechnologies). The si-PgR se- quences were 5’-GGUUUUCGAAACUUACAUATT-3’ (si-PgR 10 416), and, 5’-GACAAGUCUUAAUCAACUATT-3’ (si-PgR 10 417). NCI-H295R cells were transfected with si-PgR or si- control using Lipofectamine RNAiMAX (LifeTechnologies). Preliminary experiments showed that transfection with 10 nM si-PgR 10 416 and 30 nM si-PgR 10 417 efficiently down-reg- ulated PgRA and PgRB mRNA already after 24 hours of exposure.
Liquid Cromatography-Tandem Mass Spectrometry. Steroid extraction was performed as described in (19) and is reported in the Supplementary Materials and Methods. Analysis was carried
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out using a high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) system (1260 Series Agilent Technologies; Santa Clara, CA, USA) equipped with a reversed-phase Hypersil Gold C8 (100 × 3 mm 3um) analytical column (Thermo Finnigan, San Jose, CA, USA) connected to a detection system (Agilent 6460 triple quad- rupole mass spectrometer) with a Jet Stream Electrospray ion source operating in positive-ion mode (ESI+). Data were ac- quired in MRM (multiple reaction monitoring) mode. Transi- tions, cone voltage, and collision energy were optimized using the MassHunter Optimization program (Mass Hunter Opti- mizer Triple Quad B04.01 Agilent Technologies). Data acqui- sition was controlled using Mass Hunter software and processed with QuanL0 software (Agilent Technologies). For calibration, blank medium (0.5 ml) was spiked with all solutions of the ste- roids in methanol, resulting in calibrator concentrations of 1.0- 50.0 ng/ml and 0.1-5.0 ng/ml for Pg.
Antitumor activity of AA in NCI-H295R ACC xenograft mice model. Experiments were carried out using 8-10 week-old fe- male SCID mice (Charles River, Calco, Italy), maintained in lam- inar flow rooms at constant temperature and humidity, with free access to food and water. Experiments were approved by the Ethics Committee for Animal Experimentation of the Istituto Nazionale dei Tumori, Milan, and communicated to the Min- istry of Health, in compliance with Italian law. Exponentially growing tumor cells (107 cells/mouse) were resuspended in me- dium and Matrigel Basement Matrix (BD Biosciences, Milan, Italy) (total volume 20 µL, ratio 1:1), and subcutaneously in- jected into the right flank of groups of 12 mice. AA was admin- istered i.p (196 mg/Kg) daily for 16 days (qdx16); control mice received the vehicle (2.5%benzyl alcohl, 97.5% safflower oil). Toxicity of the drug treatment was monitored as body weight loss. To evaluate plasma and tumor steroid content, at the end of treatment, 6 mice/group were bled under anesthesia and then
sacrificed by cervical dislocation. Plasma was prepared using standard protocols. Tumors were removed, weighted, and fro- zen in liquid nitrogen.
Statistical Analysis. Statistical analysis was carried out using GraphPad Prism software (version 5.02, GraphPad Software, La Jolla, CA, USA). One-way ANOVA with Bonferroni’s correction was used for multiple comparisons. Unpaired two-tailed Stu- dent’s t test was used for statistical comparison of mean tumor volume (TV) in mice and of steroid levels in tumors and plasma. P values < 0.05 were considered statistically significant. Unless otherwise specified, data are expressed as mean ± SEM of at least three experiments run in triplicate.
Results
AA inhibits cortisol synthesis in NCI-H295R cells
The human NCI-H295R and SW13 cell lines were an- alyzed for CYP17A1 gene expression by qRT-PCR. CYP17A1 mRNA was highly expressed in NCI-H295R cells (ACt 4.41 ± 0.10) and undetectable in SW13 cells, which were then used as negative control. The mRNAs of other key enzymes involved in the steroid hormones bio- synthesis was also expressed in NCI-H295R cells: CYP11A1 (ACt 5.14 ± 0.11), CYP21A2 (ACt 8.86 ± 0.12), CYP11B1 (ACt 11.94 ± 0.22), CYP11B2 (ACt 12.53 ± 0.16), 3ßHSD2B (ACt 10.35±0.11), SULT2A1 (ACt 7.69 ± 0.08) and CYP19A1 (ACt 7.17 ± 0.08).
Cortisol concentration was measured in cell culture su- pernatants following treatment of NCI-H295R and SW13
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| Progesterone (ng/mL) | Cortisol (ng/ml) | Corticosterone (ng/ml) | Aldosterone (ng/ml) | DHEA (ng/ml) | Androstenedione (ng/mL) | Testosterone (ng/ml) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ctrl | 0.07 ± 0.005 | 0.83 ± 0.05 | 16.54 ± 0.3 | 0.36 ± 0.05 | 2.9 ± 0.25 | 25.5 ± 1.6 | 2.42 ± 0.008 |
| AA | 0.92 ± 0.1 | nd | 3.1 ± 0.4 | nd | 0.08 ± 0.004 | nd | nd |
Ctrl denotes control, AA abiraterone acetate, DHEA dehydroepiandrosterone.
cells with increasing concentrations of AA at different times (2-6 days). As shown in Figure 1, starting from 2 days of treatment, AA significantly and steadily reduced cortisol secretion at all concentrations in the supernatants of NCI-H295R cells but not of the SW13 cells (data not shown). Cortisol was almost undetectable in the superna- tants of cells treated for 2 days with 100-400 nM AA. Cortisol concentration in the supernatants of control cells was slightly increased after 2 days (1.01 ± 0.16 ng/ml) and then stabilized around the starting values (0.86 ± 0.01 ng/ml) after 6 days.
CYP17A1 inhibition by AA inhibits androgen synthesis and increases progesterone production
NCI-H295R cells were treated with AA and the super- natants analyzed for hormone production. As shown in Table 1, AA-induced inhibition of CYP17A1 (50 nM; 2 days) led to a consistent decrease of testosterone and its precursors (dehydroepiandrosterone [DHEA] and andro- stenedione [ASD]) in comparison wiht untreated cells, whereas the CYP17A1 substrate progesterone increased by about 13 times. The progesterone-down-stream hor- mones corticosterone and aldosterone decreased after AA treatment.
AA induces apoptosis-mediated cytotoxic effects in NCI-H295R cells
Besides revealing an antisecretive effect, microscope analyses showed a concentration- and time-dependent re- duction in vital NCI-H295R cells after AA exposure. After 2 days of treatment, 200 nM AA significantly reduced cell number (% of reduction: 22 ± 1; P < . 01 vs. untreated cells), an effect that was drastically augmented after 4 and 6 days of treatment (% of reduction: 47 ± 6; P < . 05 vs. untreated cells and 62 ± 3; P < . 001 vs. untreated cells, respectively). AA up to 400 nM did not further affect NCI- H295R cell number. SW13 cell viability was completely unaffected by AA (Supplemental Figure 1), suggesting that the antineoplastic effect of AA was related to the inhibition of CYP17A1 activity.
The cytotoxic effects in NCI-H295R cells were further investigated by MTT assay. As shown in Figure 2A, AA reduced cell viability in a concentration-dependent man- ner, with an IC50 value of 62.9 nM (95% confidence in-
terval (CI) [CI] 54.14 to 73.06). The maximum effect was observed after 4 days of treatment, with no significant change up to 6 days (IC50 value of 70.1 nM; 95% CI 48.02 to 87.29). All subsequent experiments were then per- formed by treating NCI-H295R cells with the IC50 value for 4 days. Apoptosis was the main mechanism involved in the observed cytotoxicity (Supplemental Figure 2).
AA inhibits tumor growth in the NCI-H295R xenograft model and interferes with steroid production
NCI-H295R cells were subcutaneously inoculated into immune-deficient mice. AA inhibited tumor growth when administered daily for 16 days to mice bearing established tumors. AA treatment, which was well tolerated, started to reduce tumor growth at day 36 (tumor volume inhibi- tion [TVI] 38%) (P = . 07 for AA-treated vs. control) - ie, 8 days from the start of treatment - and this trend was maintained (P = . 0707 and P = . 0646 for AA-treated vs. control at day 40 and 43, respectively) until day 61, when significant tumor growth inhibition was observed (P = .009 for AA-treated vs. control, TVI 34%) (Figure 2B). Analysis of the steroid levels in plasma and tumor samples showed that progesterone levels were increased in both plasma and tumor specimens (Figure 2C, panel a and b), whereas cortisol levels were not significantly modified (Supplemental Table 3). Testosterone levels were signifi- cantly decreased in AA-treated tumors (Figure 2C, panel c), but no significant differences were observed between the plasma levels in the treated vs the untreated animals (Supplemental Table 3). Higher levels of the mineralcor- ticoid hormones, corticosterone and aldosterone, were found in the plasma and tumor tissues of the AA-treated mice than the controls.
AA affects B-catenin translocation into the nucleus in NCI-H295R cells
The pathogenic p.S45P mutation of CTNNB1 gene, which results in abnormal ß-catenin nuclear accumulation (20, 21), is characteristic of NCI-H295R cells. The effect of AA on ß-catenin subcellular localization was investi- gated. Immunofluorescence analyses showed high expres- sion of ß-catenin in the nucleus of cells under basal con- dition (Figure 3A), whereas ß-catenin was mainly retained
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in cytoplasmic sites following AA treatment (63 nM) (Fig- ure 3B).
AA induces cytotoxic effects in primary human ACC cells
The effect of AA on cell viability was tested on five ACC primary cultures derived from the ACC patients. Primary cells were treated with AA for 4 days. In cortisol-secreting ACC tumors (ACC01 and ACC02), AA exerted a concen- tration-dependent inhibition of cell viability, as shown by MTT assay, with an IC50 values of 127.8 nM (95% CI 60.9 to 178.4) and 96 nM (95% CI 90.4 to 101.9) for ACC01 and ACC02, respectively (Figure 4). In these cells, AA-induced CYP17A inhibition resulted in a marked in- crease in progesterone levels (from 1.9 ± 0.1 to 22 ± 1.4 ng/ml/105 cells in ACC01 and from 1.4 + 0.1 to 43.7 ± 3.4 ng/ml/105 cells in ACC02), whereas cortisol secretion was drastically reduced (from 0.2 ± 0.001 to 0.06 ± 0.002 ng/ml/105 cells in ACC01 and from 5.7 + 0.5 to 1.2 + 0.2 ng/ml/105 cells in ACC02).
In the three primary cultures from nonsecreting ACC tumors (ACC03, ACC06, ACC08), steroid hormones were almost undetectable in cell supernatants (data not shown) and AA treatment, up to 4 days, did not affect cell viability (Figure 4).
AA-mediated increase of progesterone secretion in NCI-H295R cells as a mechanism of drug-induced decrease in cell viability
This preclinical study was conducted in only one cell model and few primary cultures; nonetheless, the inability of AA to affect the viability of primary cells from nonse- creting ACC suggests a hormone-related mechanism for the decrease in cell viability. MTT assay showed that hy- drocortisone (0.1-50 MM) did not significantly affect NCI-H295R cell viability (OD 540/620 nm values: ctrl: 0.53 ± 0.03; hydrocortisone 50 uM: 0.51 ± 0.028),
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whereas cell exposure to increasing concentrations of di- hydrotestosterone ([DHT], 0.01 pM-1 nM) had a signif- icant inhibitory effect (IC50 value of 3.15 pM; 95% CI 1.5 to 6.6). The role of progesterone was next assessed by qRT-PCR and western blot assay of progesterone receptor (PgR) expression. PgR mRNA was detected, the ACt value being 10.97 ± 0.13 (ACt value of the positive control - MCF7 - was 10.14 ± 0.16). In addition, a specific primary antibody recognizing both the PgRA and PgRB isoforms (MW: 94 and 114 kDa, respectively) revealed that PgRB was the predominant isoform expressed in NCI-H295R cells (Supplemental Figure 3).
NCI-H295R cells were then treated with AA in the presence of increasing concentrations of the PgR antago- nist mifepristone (0.1 pM-100 pM) and analyzed for cell viability. As shown in Figure 5A, the cytotoxic effect of AA was prevented in a concentration-dependent manner by mifepristone, whereas exposure to mifepristone alone did not affect NCI-H295R cell viability (Supplemental Figure 4). The role of Pg was highlighted using an RNAi approach and by silencing the PgR gene (Supplemental Figure 2). The effect of PgR knock-down on AA cell viability was then investigated in NCI-H295R cells exposed to either si-PgR 10 416 (10 nM), si-PgR 10 417 (30 nM) or si- control for 2 days, and then treated with AA IC50 for 4 days. Silencing NCI-H295R cells by both siRNAs signif- icantly prevented AA-induced cell death (Figure 5B).
Discussion
New drugs for the rapid control of cortisol and androgen hypersecretion are need in the management of ACC. Since AA is able to selectively and irreversibly inhibit the CYP17A1 related enzymes 17a-hydroxylase and c17, 20- lyase, which are critical for cortisol and androgen biosyn- thesis, the drug holds promise as a potential component in the treatment algorithm of patients with ACC.
This study was designed to evaluate the antisecretive properties of AA in ACC models, including the human NCI-H295R cell line, a widely accepted model of hor- monally active ACC (15), which expresses high amounts of CYP17A1 mRNA and other key enzymes of steroido- genesis. We found that AA significantly and steadily in- hibited cortisol synthesis in NCI-H295R cells, but not in SW13 cells, an in vitro model of hormonally inactive ACC, which had undetectable CYP17A1 expression. AA-in- duced CYP17A1 inhibition in NCI-H295R cells also led to a marked reduction in androgen synthesis in cell medium, whereas progesterone concentration consistently in- creased. Of note is that the IC50 value of 63 nM fell within the range of the reported Cmax plasma drug concentra-
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tions at steady-state when AA was administered to CRPC patients at a daily dose of 1000 mg (226 ± 178 ng/ml; corresponding to a range from 19 to 157 nM) (Drugdex- Micromedex 2.0). Interestingly, corticosterone and aldo- sterone levels decreased when the cells were exposed to AA. These data are shared by those reported in a recent study performed on NCI-H295R cells: in vitro AA was found to inhibit the 21-hydroxylase (CYP21A2) enzyme that converts progesterone to hydroxy-corticosterone, a precursor of both corticosterone and aldosterone (22).
Intriguingly, we also found that AA significantly re- duced cell viability in a concentration- and time-depen- dent manner in NCI-H295R cells, with the maximum ef- fect occurring after exposure for 4 days. The reduction in cell viability was mainly due to an increased rate of apoptosis.
The animal models using NCI-H295 cells xenografted into immunodeficient mice indicated that AA is able to significantly inhibit tumor growth, which was associated with the concomitant increase in progesterone levels. While cortisol levels were not affected, corticosterone and aldosterone levels were increased in the plasma and tu- mors from the AA-treated mice. The data on plasma hor- mone levels can be explained by the fact that, unlike hu- mans, the adrenals of rodents do not express the CYP17A1 gene and therefore have no P450C17 enzyme for cortisol production, but produce corticosterone (23). However, we find no plausible explanation for why the cortisol con- centration in the tumor tissues of the AA-treated mice did not differ from that of the control mice. It should be noted that, because this is a cross-sectional comparison, we did not have data on cortisol concentration in tumor tissue in the AA-treated mice at baseline condition before AA ad-
ministration. Another possible ex- planation is that while this mouse model is a workable experimental model to measure antineoplastic AA activity on ACC, it is not the appro- priate model to measure changes in steroidal hormone secretion.
The antitumor properties of AA si-PgR si-PgR 10416 10417 were also evident in the two primary cell cultures obtained from the pa- tients bearing cortisol-secreting ACC. Similar to what we observed in the NCI-H295R cells, AA exerted concentration-dependent cytotoxic activity in these cultures, with marked reduction in cortisol and an- drogen concentrations in the me- dium, whereas the progesterone lev- els increased significantly. By contrast, AA was ineffective in af- fecting cell viability in the three primary cell cultures de- rived from the nonsecreting ACC tumors, and these find- ings were consisted with those observed in SW13 cells. Taken together, our results indicate that the antineoplastic activity of AA is limited to hormone-secreting ACC. We then wanted to determine whether the AA-induced changes in hormonal levels were responsible for the de- crease in cell viability. In agreement with previous reports, we observed that cortisol exposure did not significantly affect NCI-H295R cell viability (24), whereas DHT ex- erted a significant concentration-dependent cytotoxic ef- fect (25). These data suggest that the reduction in both cortisol and androgen levels induced by AA was unlikely to be related to the observed drug-induced decrease of cell viability.
We therefore focused our attention on the AA-induced increase in progesterone, as already observed in CRPC patients (9). The biological functions of progesterone are mediated by nuclear PgRs, which are expressed in two different isoforms, the full length PgRB and the short form PgRA. In humans, the ratio of the two isoforms is critical for regulating biological responses of PgR in target tissues (26). The two PgR isoforms are present in normal adrenal tissue and in ACC and have a similar expression rate (27), whereas NCI-H295R cells display a higher expression of PgRB than PgRA (27). We found that PgRB is predomi- nantly expressed in NCI-H295R cells and that the PgR antagonist mifepristone was able to antagonize AA-in- duced NCI-H295R cell toxicity in a concentration-depen- dent manner. In addition, the cytotoxic effect induced by AA was completely reverted by silencing PgR. These data provide indirect evidence for a role of PgR in mediating the
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AA-induced decrease in cell viability. Pertinently, estra- diol was previously found to induce NCI-H295R cell pro- liferation by a nongenomic signaling stimulation of ERK1/2, and AKT phosphorylation (28), and drugs tar- geting estrogen receptor « were found to effectively con- trol the proliferation of ACC in vitro (28).
The Wnt/B-catenin pathway plays a central role in ACC pathophysiology and is a potential therapeutic target for drug development (3). Interestingly, progesterone contrib- utes to the dynamic modification of the endometrial epi- thelium during the menstrual cycle by inhibiting Wnt/B- catenin signaling, which is also required for maintaining endometrial homeostasis and for contrasting progression toward hyperplasia and carcinogenesis (29, 30). We found that AA induced an increase in progesterone levels and prevented the nuclear accumulation of ß-catenin in NCI- H295R cells. Collectively, these results suggest that PgR signaling, via negative modulation of the Wnt/ß-catenin pathway, could contribute to AA inhibition of cell viabil- ity in ACC. We are now studying whether progesterone is able to modify Wnt/B-catenin signaling and the molecular mechanism underlying this phenomenon.
In conclusion, our preclinical data suggest that AA may be of value in the management of secreting ACC. AA may possess not only antisecretive but also antitumor activity perhaps mediated through inhibition of the Wnt/B-catenin pathway. The inhibition of AA antineoplastic activity by silencing PgR is a relevant finding that suggests that PgR may be a new target of antineoplastic therapy for ACC. On the basis of these results, we are conducting a prospective clinical trial to test AA activity in the management of Cushing’s syndrome induced by ACC (Eudract: n. 2016-000 945-29).
Acknowledgments
This work was supported by AIRC, project IG17678, and by a private grant of Mrs Serena Ambrogini and family in memory of her son Guido Cioni.
M.F. was supported by a grant from the Italian Society of Pharmacology.
We are grateful to Mrs N. Carenini for technical support.
Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: Al- fredo Berruti, MD, Oncology Unit, Department of Surgery, Ra- diology, and Public Health, University of Brescia and ASST Spedali Civili di Brescia, P.le Spedali Civili 1, 25 124 Brescia, Italy, Phone: +39 030 3 995 410, Fax: +39 0303995072, e- mail: alfredo.berruti@gmail.com.
# These authors equally contributed to this work
* Corresponding Author
Disclosure Summary: the authors have nothing to disclose. This work was supported by .
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