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Buckley, Amy
- Publication1,4-dihydroxy quininib attenuates growth of colorectal cancer cells and xenografts and regulates the TIE-2 signaling pathway in patient tumours(Impact Journals LLC, 2019)
;Butler, Clare T ;Kennedy, Susan A; ;Doyle, Ronan ;Conroy, Emer ;Gallagher, William M ;O’Sullivan, JacinthaKennedy, Breandán NColorectal cancer (CRC) is the second leading cause of cancer associated deaths in developed countries. Cancer progression and metastatic spread is reliant on new blood vasculature, or angiogenesis. Tumour-related angiogenesis is regulated by proand anti-angiogenic factors secreted from malignant tissue in a stepwise process. Previously we structurally modified the small anti-angiogenic molecule quininib and discovered a more potent anti-angiogenic compound 1, 4 dihydroxy quininib (Q8), an antagonist of cysteinyl leukotriene receptor-1 with VEGF-independent bioactivity. Here, Q8, quininib (Q1) and five structural analogues were assayed for anti-tumorigenic effects in pre-clinical cancer models. Q8 reduced clone formation of the human colorectal cancer cell line HT29-Luc2. Gene silencing of CysLT1 in HT29-Luc2 cells significantly reduced expression of calpain-2. In human ex vivo colorectal cancer tumour explants, Q8 significantly decreased the secretion of both TIE-2 and VCAM-1 expression. In vivo Q8 was well tolerated up to 50 mg/kg by Balb/C mice and significantly more effective at reducing tumour volume in colorectal tumour xenografts compared to the parent drug quininib. In tumour xenografts, Q8 significantly reduced expression of the angiogenic marker calpain-2. In summary, we propose Q8 may act on the TIE-2-Angiopoietin signalling pathway to significantly inhibit the process of tumour angiogenesis in colorectal cancer.
- PublicationLeukaemia inhibitory factor is associated with treatment resistance in oesophageal adenocarcinoma(Impact Journals LLC, 2018)
; ;Lynam-Lennon, Niamh ;Kennedy, Susan A ;Dunne, Margaret R ;Aird, John J ;Foley, Emma K ;Clarke, Niamh ;Ravi, Narayanasamy ;O’Toole, Dermot ;Reynolds, John V ;Kennedy, Breandán NO’Sullivan, JacinthaOesophageal cancer is an aggressive disease with a poor 5 year survival rate of <20% of diagnosed patients. Unfortunately, only 20-30% Oesophageal Adenocarinoma (OAC) patients show a beneficial response to neoadjuvant therapy (neoCT). Inflammation influences OAC given the increased risk of cancer development and poor outcome for obese patients where altered secretion of adipokines and cytokines from adipose tissue contributes a pro-tumourigenic environment. We carried out a large proteomics screen of 184 proteins to compare the inflammatory and oncogenic profiles of an isogenic radioresistant in-vitro model of OAC. We found that leukaemia inhibitory factor (LIF), an IL-6 type cytokine, was significantly elevated in radioresistant OAC cells (p=0.007). Furthermore, significantly higher circulating levels of LIF were present in the serum from treatment-naive OAC patients who had a subsequent poor pathological response to neo-adjuvant therapy, (p=0.037). Quantitative PCR analysis revealed expression of LIF receptor (LIFR) may function as a predictive indicator of response to neo-adjuvant chemoradiation therapy in OAC. LIF was demonstrated to be actively secreted from human OAC treatment-naïve biopsies and significantly correlated with the secretion of bFGF, VEGF-A and IL-8 (p<0.05, R=1), (p<0.05, R=0.9429), and (p<0.05, R=1) respectively. Importantly, LIF secretion negatively correlated with tumour infiltrating lymphocytes in pre-treatment OAC patient biopsies, (r=-0.8783, p=0.033). Elevated circulating LIF is a marker of poor response to neo-adjuvant treatment in OAC and secretion of this chemokine from the tumour is tightly linked with pro-tumourigenic mediators including bFGF, VEGF-A and IL-8. Targeting this pathway may be a novel mechanism enhance neoadjuvant treatment responses in OAC.
- PublicationPyrazinib (P3), [(E)-2-(2-Pyrazin-2-yl-vinyl)-phenol], a small molecule pyrazine compound enhances radiosensitivity in oesophageal adenocarcinoma(Elsevier Ireland Ltd, 2019)
; ;Dunne, Margaret R ;Lynam-Lennon, Niamh ;Kennedy, Susan A ;Cannon, Aoife ;Reynolds, Alison L ;Maher, Stephen G ;Reynolds, John V ;Kennedy, Breandán NO'Sullivan, JacinthaOesophageal adenocarcinoma (OAC) is an aggressive disease with 5-year survival rates of < 20%. Only 20–30% OAC patients show a beneficial response to neoadjuvant therapy. Altered mitochondrial function is linked with radioresistance in OAC. We identified pyrazinib (P3), a pyrazine phenol small molecule drug with anti-angiogenic and anti-metabolic activity in-vivo in zebrafish and in-vitro isogenic models of OAC radioresistance. Pyrazinib (P3) significantly inhibited blood vessel development in zebrafish (p < 0.001). In-vivo in zebrafish and in-vitro in an isogenic model of OAC radioresistance, pyrazinib (P3) significantly reduced measures of oxidative phosphorylation and glycolysis. Pyrazinib (P3) significantly reduced the surviving fraction in OE33P" radiation-sensitive and OE33R" radiation-resistant cells following irradiation. Under hypoxic conditions pyrazinib (P3) significantly reduced OE33R cell survival following 4 Gy irradiation (p = 0.0216). Multiplex ELISA showed significantly higher secreted levels of 9 of 30 detected inflammatory and angiogenic factors in OE33R radioresistant cells compared to OE33P cells" IL-8, IL-4, IL-6, IL-2, IL-12p70, IL-10, MCP-1, IP-10, ICAM (p < 0.05). Pyrazinib (P3) significantly reduced the secretions of IL-6 (p = 0.0006), IL-8 (p = 0.0488), and IL-4 (p = 0.0111) in OE33R cells. Collectively, these findings support further development of pyrazinib (P3) as a novel therapeutic radiosensitiser in OAC.
- PublicationReal-time metabolic profiling of oesophageal tumours reveals an altered metabolic phenotype to different oxygen tensions and to treatment with Pyrazinib(Nature Publishing Group, 2020)
; ;Dunne, Margaret R ;Morrissey, Maria E ;Kennedy, Susan A ;Nolan, Aoife ;Davern, Maria ;Foley, Emma K ;Clarke, Niamh ;Lysaght, Joanne ;Ravi, Narayanasamy ;O’Toole, Dermot ;MacCarthy, Finbar ;Reynolds, John V ;Kennedy, Breandán NO’Sullivan, JacinthaOesophageal cancer is the 6th most common cause of cancer related death worldwide. The current standard of care for oesophageal adenocarcinoma (OAC) focuses on neoadjuvant therapy with chemoradiation or chemotherapy, however the 5-year survival rates remain at< 20%. To improve treatment outcomes it is critical to further investigate OAC tumour biology, metabolic phenotype and their metabolic adaptation to different oxygen tensions. In this study, by using human ex-vivo explants we demonstrated using real-time metabolic profiling that OAC tumour biopsies have a significantly higher oxygen consumption rate (OCR), a measure of oxidative phosphorylation compared to extracellular acidification rate (ECAR), a measure of glycolysis (p= 0.0004). Previously, we identified a small molecule compound, pyrazinib which enhanced radiosensitivity in OAC. Pyrazinib significantly inhibited OCR in OAC treatment-naïve biopsies (p= 0.0139). Furthermore, OAC biopsies can significantly adapt their metabolic rate in real-time to their environment. Under hypoxic conditions pyrazinib produced a significant reduction in both OCR (p= 0.0313) and ECAR in OAC treatment-naïve biopsies. The inflammatory secretome profile from OAC treatment-naïve biopsies is heterogeneous. OCR was positively correlated with three secreted factors in the tumour conditioned media: vascular endothelial factor A (VEGF-A), IL-1RA and thymic stromal lymphopoietin (TSLP). Pyrazinib significantly inhibited IL-1β secretion (p= 0.0377) and increased IL-3 (p= 0.0020) and IL-17B (p= 0.0181). Importantly, pyrazinib did not directly alter the expression of dendritic cell maturation markers or reduce T-cell viability or activation markers. We present a new method for profiling the metabolic rate of tumour biopsies in real-time and demonstrate the novel anti-metabolic and anti-inflammatory action of pyrazinib ex-vivo in OAC tumours, supporting previous findings in-vitro whereby pyrazinib significantly enhanced radiosensitivity in OAC.
- PublicationCharacterisation of an Isogenic Model of Cisplatin Resistance in Oesophageal Adenocarcinoma Cells(MDPI AG, 2019)
; ;Bibby, Becky AS ;Dunne, Margaret R ;Kennedy, Susan A ;Davern, Maria B ;Kennedy, Breandán N ;Maher, Stephen GO’Sullivan, JacinthaCisplatin (cis-diamminedichloroplatinum) is widely used for the treatment of solid malignancies" however, the development of chemoresistance hinders the success of this chemotherapeutic in the clinic. This study provides novel insights into the molecular and phenotypic changes in an isogenic oesophageal adenocarcinoma (OAC) model of acquired cisplatin resistance. Key differences that could be targeted to overcome cisplatin resistance are highlighted. We characterise the differences in treatment sensitivity, gene expression, inflammatory protein secretions, and metabolic rate in an isogenic cell culture model of acquired cisplatin resistance in OAC. Cisplatin-resistant cells (OE33 Cis R) were significantly more sensitive to other cytotoxic modalities, such as 2 Gy radiation (p = 0.0055) and 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) (p = 0.0032) treatment than parental cisplatin-sensitive cells (OE33 Cis P). Gene expression profiling identified differences at the gene level between cisplatin-sensitive and cisplatin-resistant cells, uncovering 692 genes that were significantly altered between OE33 Cis R cells and OE33 Cis P cells. OAC is an inflammatory-driven cancer, and inflammatory secretome profiling identified 18 proteins secreted at significantly altered levels in OE33 Cis R cells compared to OE33 Cis P cells. IL-7 was the only cytokine to be secreted at a significantly higher levels from OE33 Cis R cells compared to OE33 Cis P cells. Additionally, we profiled the metabolic phenotype of OE33 Cis P and OE33 Cis R cells under normoxic and hypoxic conditions. The oxygen consumption rate, as a measure of oxidative phosphorylation, is significantly higher in OE33 Cis R cells under normoxic conditions. In contrast, under hypoxic conditions of 0.5% O2, the oxygen consumption rate is significantly lower in OE33 Cis R cells than OE33 Cis P cells. This study provides novel insights into the molecular and phenotypic changes in an isogenic OAC model of acquired cisplatin resistance, and highlights therapeutic targets to overcome cisplatin resistance in OAC.
- PublicationCombining 1,4-dihydroxy quininib with Bevacizumab/FOLFOX alters angiogenic and inflammatory secretions in ex vivo colorectal tumors(BioMed Central Ltd, 2020)
;Kennedy, Susan A ;Morrissey, Maria E ;Dunne, Margaret R ;O’Connell, Fiona ;Butler, Clare T ;Cathcart, Mary-Clare; ;Mehigan, Brian J ;Larkin, John O ;McCormick, Paul ;Kennedy, Breandán NO’Sullivan, JacinthaBackground: Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the second most common cause of cancer-related mortality worldwide with one in every five patients diagnosed with metastatic CRC (mCRC). In mCRC cases, the 5-year survival rate remains at approximately 14%, reflecting the lack of effectiveness of currently available treatments such as the anti-VEGF targeting antibody Bevacizumab combined with the chemotherapy folinic acid, fluorouracil and oxaliplatin (FOLFOX). Approximately 60% of patients do not respond to this combined treatment. Furthermore, Bevacizumab inhibits dendritic cell (DC) maturation in poor responders, a key process for tumor eradication.
Method: Following drug treatment, secreted expression levels of angiogenic and inflammatory markers in tumor conditioned media generated from human ex vivo colorectal tumors were measured by ELISA. Dendritic cell phenotypic and maturation markers were assessed by flow cytometry.
Results: Our novel compound, 1,4-dihydroxy quininib, acts in an alternative pathway compared to the approved therapy Bevacizumab. 1,4-dihydroxy quininib alone, and in combination with Bevacizumab or FOLFOX significantly reduced TIE-2 expression which is involved in the promotion of tumor vascularization. Combination treatment with 1,4-dihydroxy quininib significantly increased the expression level of DC phenotypic and maturation markers.
Conclusion: Our results indicate the anti-angiogenic small molecule 1,4-dihydroxy quininib could be an alternative novel treatment in combination therapy for CRC patients.