Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy (Nov 2022)

Rafoxanide sensitizes colorectal cancer cells to TRAIL-mediated apoptosis

  • Federica Laudisi,
  • Teresa Pacifico,
  • Claudia Maresca,
  • Anderson Luiz-Ferreira,
  • Sara Antonelli,
  • Angela Ortenzi,
  • Alfredo Colantoni,
  • Antonio Di Grazia,
  • Eleonora Franzè,
  • Marco Colella,
  • Davide Di Fusco,
  • Giuseppe S. Sica,
  • Ivan Monteleone,
  • Giovanni Monteleone,
  • Carmine Stolfi

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 155
p. 113794

Abstract

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Colorectal cancer (CRC) remains a leading causes of cancer-related death in the world, mainly due to the lack of effective treatment of advanced disease. TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL)-driven cell death, a crucial event in the control of tumor growth, selectively targets malignant rather than non-transformed cells. However, the fact that cancer cells, including CRC cells, are either intrinsically resistant or acquire resistance to TRAIL, represents a major hurdle to the use of TRAIL-based strategies in the clinic. Agents able to overcome CRC cell resistance to TRAIL have thus great therapeutic potential and many researchers are making efforts to identify TRAIL sensitizers. The anthelmintic drug rafoxanide has recently emerged as a potent anti-tumor molecule for different cancer types and we recently reported that rafoxanide restrained the proliferation of CRC cells, but not of normal colonic epithelial cells, both in vitro and in a preclinical model mimicking sporadic CRC. As these findings were linked with the induction of endoplasmic reticulum stress, a phenomenon involved in the regulation of various components of the TRAIL-driven apoptotic pathway, we sought to determine whether rafoxanide could restore the sensitivity of CRC cells to TRAIL. Our data show that rafoxanide acts as a selective TRAIL sensitizer in vitro and in a syngeneic experimental model of CRC, by decreasing the levels of c-FLIP and survivin, two key molecules conferring TRAIL resistance. Collectively, our data suggest that rafoxanide could potentially be deployed as an anti-cancer drug in the combinatorial approaches aimed at overcoming CRC cell resistance to TRAIL-based therapies.

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