GPR54 is a target for suppression of metastasis in endometrial cancer.
Kang. Hyun Sook HS; Baba. Tsukasa T; Mandai. Masaki M; Matsumura. Noriomi N; Hamanishi. Junzo J; Kharma. Budiman B; Kondoh. Eiji E; Yoshioka. Yumiko Y; Oishi. Shinya S; Fujii. Nobutaka N; Murphy. Susan K SK; Konishi. Ikuo I
Key Findings
- High GPR54 expression in endometrial tumors is associated with better overall survival and less aggressive disease
- Metastin-10 (kisspeptin-10) can suppress metastasis in tumors that express GPR54
- DNA‑demethylating drug 5‑aza‑DC can restore GPR54 expression, potentially enhancing the anti‑metastatic effect
Practical Outcomes
- For most health‑optimizers, this research isn’t directly usable yet—there’s no proven supplement or dosage for kisspeptin‑10, and it’s focused on a specific cancer type. It does suggest that future therapies might combine kisspeptin‑10 with agents that boost GPR54, but these are still experimental and not ready for self‑experimentation.
Summary
The study found that a small protein piece called kisspeptin-10 (also known as metastin-10) can help stop endometrial cancer cells from spreading, but only when the cancer cells have enough of its partner receptor, GPR54. Higher levels of GPR54 were linked to better survival, and drugs that turn on GPR54 might make kisspeptin-10 work better.
Abstract
Invasion into deep myometrium and/or lymphovascular space is a well-known risk factor for endometrial cancer metastasis, resulting in poor prognosis. It is therefore clinically important to identify novel molecules that suppress tumor invasion. Reduced expression of the metastasis suppressor, kisspeptin (KISS1), and its endogenous receptor, GPR54, has been reported in several cancers, but the significance of the KISS1/GPR54 axis in endometrial cancer metastasis has not been clarified. Metastin-10 is the minimal bioactive sequence of genetic products of KISS1. Clinicopathological analysis of 92 endometrial cancers revealed overall survival is improved in cancers with high expression of GPR54 (P < 0.05) and that GPR54 expression is associated with known prognostic factors including FIGO stage, grade, and deep myometrial invasion. Through RNAi and microarray analyses, metastin-10 was predicted to suppress metastasis of GPR54-expressing endometrial cancers in vivo. Methylation analysis revealed GPR54 is epigenetically regulated. Metastin-GPR54 axis function was restored following treatment with the DNA hypomethylating agent 5-aza-DC. These data suggest that metastin-10 may be effective at inhibiting the metastatic spread of endometrial cancers in combination with demethylating agents to induce GPR54 expression.
Study Information
pubmed
2011
2011-01-31T00:00:00.000Z
10.1158/1535-7163.mct-10-0763