Antagonist of Growth Hormone-Releasing Hormone Receptor MIA-690 Suppresses the Growth of Androgen-Independent Prostate Cancers.
Muñoz-Moreno. Laura L; Gómez-Calcerrada. M Isabel MI; Arenas. M Isabel MI; Carmena. M José MJ; Prieto. Juan C JC; Schally. Andrew V AV; Bajo. Ana M AM
Key Findings
- MIA‑690 plus Gefitinib reduced prostate‑cancer cell viability, adhesion and enzyme activity more than either alone
- Both agents caused cell‑cycle arrest in cancer cells
- The combination also slowed tumor growth in mice
Practical Outcomes
- These results are specific to advanced prostate‑cancer treatment and involve experimental drugs not available for personal use; they do not provide actionable guidance for longevity, metabolic health, or performance.
Summary
The study tested a drug that blocks a hormone receptor (MIA‑690) together with an EGFR blocker (Gefitinib) in prostate‑cancer cells and mice, showing they work better together to slow tumor growth.
Abstract
The development of resistance remains the primary challenge in treating castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC). GHRH receptors (GHRH-R), which are coupled to G-proteins (GPCRs), can mediate EGFR transactivation, offering an alternative pathway for tumour survival. This study aimed to evaluate the effects of the GHRH-R antagonist MIA-690, in combination with the EGFR inhibitor Gefitinib, on cell viability, adhesion, gelatinolytic activity, and the cell cycle in advanced prostate cancer PC-3 cells. The findings demonstrate a synergistic effect between MIA-690 and Gefitinib, leading to the inhibition of cell viability, adhesion, and metalloprotease activity. Cell cycle analysis suggests that both compounds induce cell cycle arrest, both individually and in combination. Furthermore, similar effects of the GHRH-R antagonist MIA-690 combined with Gefitinib were observed in PC-3 tumours developed by subcutaneous injection in athymic nude mice 36 days post-inoculation. These results indicate that combined therapy with a GHRH-R antagonist and an EGFR inhibitor exerts a stronger antitumor effect compared to monotherapy by preventing transactivation between EGFR and GHRH-R in CRPC.
Study Information
pubmed
2024
2024-10-18T00:00:00.000Z
10.3390/ijms252011200
30