Frontiers in Oncology (Aug 2024)

Testing calpain inhibition in tumor endothelial cells: novel targetable biomarkers against glioblastoma malignancy

  • Laura Guarnaccia,
  • Stefania Elena Navone,
  • Laura Begani,
  • Emanuela Barilla,
  • Emanuele Garzia,
  • Emanuele Garzia,
  • Rolando Campanella,
  • Monica Miozzo,
  • Monica Miozzo,
  • Laura Fontana,
  • Laura Fontana,
  • Giovanni Alotta,
  • Chiara Cordiglieri,
  • Chiara Gaudino,
  • Luigi Schisano,
  • Antonella Ampollini,
  • Laura Riboni,
  • Marco Locatelli,
  • Marco Locatelli,
  • Giovanni Marfia,
  • Giovanni Marfia

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2024.1355202
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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IntroductionGlioblastoma IDH-wildtype (GBM) is the most malignant brain tumor in adults, with a poor prognosis of approximately 15 months after diagnosis. Most patients suffer from a recurrence in <1 year, and this renders GBM a life-threatening challenge. Among molecular mechanisms driving GBM aggressiveness, angiogenesis mediated by GBM endothelial cells (GECs) deserves consideration as a therapeutic turning point. In this scenario, calpains, a family of ubiquitously expressed calcium-dependent cysteine proteases, emerged as promising targets to be investigated as a novel therapeutic strategy and prognostic tissue biomarkers.MethodsTo explore this hypothesis, GECs were isolated from n=10 GBM biopsies and characterized phenotypically by immunofluorescence. The expression levels of calpains were evaluated by qRT-PCR and Western blot, and their association with patients’ prognosis was estimated by Pearson correlation and Kaplan–Meier survival analysis. Calpain targeting efficacy was assessed by a time- and dose-dependent proliferation curve, MTT assay for viability, caspase-3/7 activity, migration and angiogenesis in vitro, and gene and protein expression level modification.ResultsImmunofluorescence confirmed the endothelial phenotype of our primary GECs. A significant overexpression was observed for calpain-1/2/3 (CAPN) and calpain-small-subunits-1/2 (CAPNS1), whereas calpastatin gene, the calpain natural inhibitor, was reported to be downregulated. A significant negative correlation was observed between CAPN1/CAPNS1 and patient overall survival. GEC challenging revealed that the inhibition of calpain-1 exerts the strongest proapoptotic efficacy, so GEC mortality reached the 80%, confirmed by the increased activity of caspase-3/7. Functional assays revealed a strong affection of in vitro migration and angiogenesis. Gene and protein expression proved a downregulation of MAPK, VEGF/VEGFRs, and Bcl-2, and an upregulation of caspases and Bax-family mediators.ConclusionOverall, the differential expression of calpains and their correlation with patient survival suggest a novel promising target pathway, whose blockade showed encouraging results toward precision medicine strategies.

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