Suppressing activity of tributyrin on hepatocarcinogenesis is associated with inhibiting the p53-CRM1 interaction and changing the cellular compartmentalization of p53 protein

Autor: Frederick A. Beland, Maria Aderuza Horst, Paulo Eduardo Latorre Martins Tavares, Laura Helena Gasparini Fernandes, Fernando Salvador Moreno, Svitlana Shpyleva, Igor P. Pogribny, Marta Pogribna, Aline de Conti, Kelly Silva Furtado, Volodymyr Tryndyak, Juliana Festa Ortega, Renato Heidor
Rok vydání: 2016
Předmět:
0301 basic medicine
Male
Cytoplasm
tributyrin
Carcinoma
Hepatocellular

Tributyrin
Receptors
Cytoplasmic and Nuclear

Apoptosis
Biology
Karyopherins
Bioinformatics
CRM1
03 medical and health sciences
chemistry.chemical_compound
0302 clinical medicine
In vivo
Cell Line
Tumor

medicine
Animals
Humans
chemoprevention
Rats
Wistar

CARCINOMA HEPATOCELULAR
Triglycerides
Cell Proliferation
Cell Nucleus
p53 subcellular localization
Cell growth
Liver Neoplasms
hepatocarcinogenesis
Cancer
Sodium butyrate
medicine.disease
Cell Compartmentation
Gene Expression Regulation
Neoplastic

Disease Models
Animal

030104 developmental biology
Oncology
chemistry
Cell culture
030220 oncology & carcinogenesis
Cancer research
Butyric Acid
Apoptotic signaling pathway
Tumor Suppressor Protein p53
Liver cancer
Protein Binding
Research Paper
Zdroj: Repositório Institucional da USP (Biblioteca Digital da Produção Intelectual)
Universidade de São Paulo (USP)
instacron:USP
Oncotarget
Popis: Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), an aggressive and the fastest growing life-threatening cancer worldwide, is often diagnosed at intermediate or advanced stages of the disease, which substantially limits therapeutic approaches for its successful treatment. This indicates that the prevention of hepatocarcinogenesis is probably the most promising approach to reduce both the HCC incidence and cancer-related mortality. In previous studies, we demonstrated a potent chemopreventive effect of tributyrin, a butyric acid prodrug, on experimental hepatocarcinogenesis. The cancer-inhibitory effect of tributyrin was linked to the suppression of sustained cell proliferation and induction of apoptotic cell death driven by an activation of the p53 apoptotic signaling pathway. The goal of the present study was to investigate the underlying molecular mechanisms linked to tributyrin-mediated p53 activation. Using in vivo and in vitro models of liver cancer, we demonstrate that an increase in the level of p53 protein in nuclei, a decrease in the level of cytoplasmic p53, and, consequently, an increase in the ratio of nuclear/cytoplasmic p53 in rat preneoplastic livers and in rat and human HCC cell lines caused by tributyrin or sodium butyrate treatments was associated with a marked increase in the level of nuclear chromosome region maintenance 1 (CRM1) protein. Mechanistically, the increase in the level of nuclear p53 protein was associated with a substantially reduced binding interaction between CRM1 and p53. The results demonstrate that the cancer-inhibitory activity of sodium butyrate and its derivatives on liver carcinogenesis may be attributed to retention of p53 and CRM1 proteins in the nucleus, an event that may trigger activation of p53-mediated apoptotic cell death in neoplastic cells.
Databáze: OpenAIRE