Cathelicidin suppresses colon cancer development by inhibition of cancer associated fibroblasts.
Cheng. Michelle M; Ho. Samantha S; Yoo. Jun Hwan JH; Tran. Deanna Hoang-Yen DH; Bakirtzi. Kyriaki K; Su. Bowei B; Tran. Diana Hoang-Ngoc DH; Kubota. Yuzu Y; Ichikawa. Ryan R; Koon. Hon Wai HW
Key Findings
- LL‑37 delivered by virus or enema reduced tumor size and collagen/fibroblast markers in mouse colon cancer models
- The peptide didn’t kill cancer cells directly but blocked EMT and fibroblast‑driven cancer cell growth
- Enema delivery was effective and didn’t cause damage to normal colon tissue
Practical Outcomes
- While the results are promising, there’s no simple, safe way for individuals to use LL‑37 now. It suggests that boosting this peptide or targeting fibroblast activity could be a future anti‑cancer strategy, but more research and human trials are needed before any protocol can be recommended.
Summary
A study in mice found that the natural peptide LL‑37 can shrink colon tumors by stopping the supportive fibro‑cells and a process called EMT, rather than killing cancer cells directly. The peptide was given either through a virus or as an enema and lowered tumor size without harming normal tissue, but the methods aren’t ready for everyday use.
Abstract
Cathelicidin (LL-37 in humans and mCRAMP in mice) represents a family of endogenous antimicrobial and anti-inflammatory peptides. Cancer-associated fibroblasts can promote the proliferation of colon cancer cells and growth of colon cancer tumors. We examined the role of cathelicidin in the development of colon cancer, using subcutaneous human HT-29 colon-cancer-cell-derived tumor model in nude mice and azoxymethane- and dextran sulfate-mediated colon cancer model in C57BL/6 mice. We also determined the indirect antitumoral mechanism of cathelicidin via the inhibition of epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) of colon cancer cells and fibroblast-supported colon cancer cell proliferation. Intravenous administration of cathelicidin expressing adeno-associated virus significantly reduced the size of tumors, tumor-derived collagen expression, and tumor-derived fibroblast expression in HT-29-derived subcutaneous tumors in nude mice. Enema administration of the mouse cathelicidin peptide significantly reduced the size and number of colonic tumors in azoxymethane- and dextran sulfate-treated mice without inducing apoptosis in tumors and the adjacent normal colonic tissues. Cathelicidin inhibited the collagen expression and vimentin-positive fibroblast expression in colonic tumors. Cathelicidin did not directly affect HT-29 cell viability, but did significantly reduce tumor growth factor-β1-induced EMT of colon cancer cells. Media conditioned by the human colonic CCD-18Co fibroblasts promoted human colon cancer HT-29 cell proliferation. Cathelicidin pretreatment inhibited colon cancer cell proliferation mediated by media conditioned by human colonic CCD-18Co fibroblasts. Cathelicidin disrupted tubulin distribution in colonic fibroblasts. Disruption of tubulin in fibroblasts reduced fibroblast-supported colon cancer cell proliferation. Cathelicidin effectively inhibits colon cancer development by interfering with EMT and fibroblast-supported colon cancer cell proliferation.
Study Information
pubmed
2014
2014-12-17T00:00:00.000Z
10.2147/ceg.s70906