PUBLICATION

Downregulation of Nodal inhibits metastatic progression in retinoblastoma

Authors
Asnaghi, L., White, D.T., Yoon, L., Price, A., Lee, G.Y., Sahoo, A., Mumm, J.S., Eberhart, C.G.
ID
ZDB-PUB-190828-6
Date
2019
Source
Acta neuropathologica communications   7: 137 (Journal)
Registered Authors
Mumm, Jeff, White, David T.
Keywords
Invasion, Nodal, Proliferation, Retinoblastoma
MeSH Terms
  • Animals
  • Cell Proliferation/physiology
  • Disease Progression*
  • Down-Regulation/physiology*
  • Humans
  • Mice
  • Neoplasm Invasiveness/genetics
  • Neoplasm Invasiveness/pathology
  • Nodal Protein/biosynthesis*
  • Nodal Protein/genetics
  • Retinal Neoplasms/genetics
  • Retinal Neoplasms/metabolism*
  • Retinal Neoplasms/pathology
  • Retinoblastoma/genetics
  • Retinoblastoma/metabolism*
  • Retinoblastoma/pathology
  • Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays/methods
  • Zebrafish
PubMed
31451106 Full text @ Acta Neuropathol Commun
Abstract
Retinoblastoma is the most common intraocular malignancy in children. We previously found that the ACVR1C/SMAD2 pathway is significantly upregulated in invasive retinoblastoma samples from patients. Here we studied the role of an ACVR1C ligand, Nodal, in regulating growth and metastatic dissemination in retinoblastoma. Inhibition of Nodal using multiple short hairpin (shRNAs) in WERI Rb1 and Y79 retinoblastoma cell cultures reduced growth by more than 90%, as determined by CCK-8 growth assay. Proliferation was also significantly inhibited, as found by Ki67 assay. These effects were paralleled by inhibition in the phosphorylation of the downstream effector SMAD2, as well as induction of apoptosis, as we observed more than three-fold increase in the percentage of cells positive for cleaved-caspase-3 or expressing cleaved-PARP1. Importantly, we found that downregulation of Nodal potently suppressed invasion in vitro, by 50 to 80%, as determined by transwell invasion assay (p = 0.02). Using an orthotopic model of retinoblastoma in zebrafish, we found 34% reduction in the ability of the cells to disseminate outside the eye, when Nodal was knocked down by shRNA (p = 0.0003). These data suggest that Nodal plays an important role in promoting growth, proliferation and invasion in retinoblastoma, and can be considered a new therapeutic target for both primary tumor growth and metastatic progression.
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