Growth inhibition and differentiation of human breast cancer cells by the PAFR antagonist WEB-2086

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Abstract

WEB-2086 - an antagonist of platelet-activating factor receptor (PAFR) with known anti-inflammatory, antiangiogenic and antileukaemic properties - also proved to inhibit the proliferation in human solid tumour cell lines of different histology, and with much higher efficacy than in normal fibroblasts. A detailed analysis of WEB-2086 anticancer activity was then performed focusing on breast adenocarcinoma MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 cells. WEB-2086-treated cells, either expressing (MCF-7) or unexpressing (MDA-MB-231) the oestrogen receptor (ER)α, underwent a dose-dependent growth arrest (IC50=0. 65±0.09 and 0.41±0.07 mM, respectively) and accumulation in G 0-G1 phase. WEB-2086 also induced morphological and functional changes typical of mature mammary phenotype including (i) cell enlargement and massive neutral lipid deposition (best accomplished in MCF-7 cells); (ii) decrease in motility and active cathepsin D levels (mainly observed in highly invasive MDA-MB-231 cells). The expression of ERα was neither increased nor reactivated in treated MCF-7 or MDA-MB-231 cells, respectively. WEB-2086-induced differentiation in breast cancer cells involved the upregulation of PTEN, a key tumour suppressor protein opposing tumorigenesis, and was apparently independent of p53, PAFR, peripheral benzodiazepine receptor and ERα status. Overall, WEB-2086 can be proposed as an effective antiproliferative and differentiative agent with interesting translational opportunities to treat breast cancers in support to conventional chemotherapy. © 2006 Cancer Research UK.

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Cellai, C., Laurenzana, A., Vannucchi, A. M., Caporale, R., Paglierani, M., Di Lollo, S., … Paoletti, F. (2006). Growth inhibition and differentiation of human breast cancer cells by the PAFR antagonist WEB-2086. British Journal of Cancer, 94(11), 1637–1642. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjc.6603156

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