Despite impressive advances in understanding cancer etiology and the development of novel therapeutic approaches, the most effective therapies for solid malignancies (carcinomas) remain surgery and radiotherapy. Although effective in removing and destroying primary tumors, most patients undergoing surgery and radiotherapy will eventually succumb to metastases that develop from residual primary cancer cells that migrate and proliferate at secondary sites. In other words, most cancer patients are killed by metastases rather than the primary tumor. Given the magnitude of this problem, research into the mechanisms that control the metastatic spread of tumors is of utmost importance and urgency This proposal is based on our preliminary results that a mutation that prevents activation of the inflammation responsive protein kinase IkappaB kinase alpha (IKKalpha) results in a dramatic decrease in the metastatic spread of prostate cancer in TRAMP mice, which express a SV40 T antigen oncogene in the prostate epithelium. This reduction in metastatic activity is associated with massive upregulation of maspin, a suppressor of metastasis whose expression is almost completely abolished in primary prostate carcinomas that express the wild type form of IKKalpha. Our preliminary results also suggest that IKKalpha activation results in inhibition of maspin expression. Given its known responsiveness to cytokines produced by stromal cells as well as by inflammatory cells, IKKalpha can provide a major conduit through which the tumor microenvironment controls the metastatic potential of prostate carcinoma cells. Our goal is to test this hypothesis and identify the molecular mechanisms through which IKKalpha controls the metastatic spread of prostate cancer and the expression of maspin in TRAMP mice. We will also examine how the tumor microenvironment modulates the activity of the IKKalpha-maspin axis and will determine the mechanisms through which maspin exerts its anti-metastatic activity in this model of prostate cancer. We will examine whether IKKalpha regulates maspin expression in human prostate cancer specimens and cell lines to control their metastatic and invasive activities. In addition to providing new and important information on the control of tumor metastasis, this work can lay the foundation to the development of novel anti-metastatic therapy based on inhibition of IKKalpha that may be applicable not only to prostate cancer but other cancers as well.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
3R01CA127923-03S1
Application #
7910996
Study Section
Tumor Progression and Metastasis Study Section (TPM)
Program Officer
Mohla, Suresh
Project Start
2009-08-01
Project End
2011-07-31
Budget Start
2009-08-01
Budget End
2011-07-31
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2009
Total Cost
$264,045
Indirect Cost
Name
University of California San Diego
Department
Pharmacology
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
804355790
City
La Jolla
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
92093
Febbraio, Mark A; Reibe, Saskia; Shalapour, Shabnam et al. (2018) Preclinical Models for Studying NASH-Driven HCC: How Useful Are They? Cell Metab :
Shalapour, Shabnam; Lin, Xue-Jia; Bastian, Ingmar N et al. (2017) Inflammation-induced IgA+ cells dismantle anti-liver cancer immunity. Nature 551:340-345
Shalapour, Shabnam; Font-Burgada, Joan; Di Caro, Giuseppe et al. (2015) Immunosuppressive plasma cells impede T-cell-dependent immunogenic chemotherapy. Nature 521:94-8
Shalapour, Shabnam; Karin, Michael (2015) Immunity, inflammation, and cancer: an eternal fight between good and evil. J Clin Invest 125:3347-55
Ammirante, Massimo; Shalapour, Shabnam; Kang, Youngjin et al. (2014) Tissue injury and hypoxia promote malignant progression of prostate cancer by inducing CXCL13 expression in tumor myofibroblasts. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 111:14776-81
Ammirante, Massimo; Kuraishy, Ali I; Shalapour, Shabnam et al. (2013) An IKK?-E2F1-BMI1 cascade activated by infiltrating B cells controls prostate regeneration and tumor recurrence. Genes Dev 27:1435-40
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Li, Ning; Grivennikov, Sergei I; Karin, Michael (2011) The unholy trinity: inflammation, cytokines, and STAT3 shape the cancer microenvironment. Cancer Cell 19:429-31

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