Journal of Cachexia, Sarcopenia and Muscle (Feb 2022)

C/EBPβ promotes the expression of atrophy‐inducing factors by tumours and is a central regulator of cancer cachexia

  • Hamood AlSudais,
  • Rashida Rajgara,
  • Aisha Saleh,
  • Nadine Wiper‐Bergeron

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/jcsm.12909
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 743 – 757

Abstract

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Abstract Background CCAAT/enhancer‐binding protein β (C/EBPβ) is a transcription factor whose high expression in human cancers is associated with tumour aggressiveness and poor outcomes. Most advanced cancer patients will develop cachexia, characterized by loss of skeletal muscle mass. In response to secreted factors from cachexia‐inducing tumours, C/EBPβ is stimulated in muscle, leading to both myofibre atrophy and the inhibition of muscle regeneration. Involved in the regulation of immune responses, C/EBPβ induces the expression of many secreted factors, including cytokines. Because tumour‐secreted factors drive cachexia and aggressive tumours have higher expression of C/EBPβ, we examined a potential role for C/EBPβ in the expression of tumour‐derived cachexia‐inducing factors. Methods We used gain‐of‐function and loss‐of‐function approaches in vitro and in vivo to evaluate the role of tumour C/EBPβ expression on the secretion of cachexia‐inducing factors. Results We report that C/EBPβ overexpression up‐regulates the expression of 260 secreted protein genes, resulting in a secretome that inhibits myogenic differentiation (−31%, P < 0.05) and myotube maturation [−38% (fusion index) and −25% (myotube diameter), P < 0.05]. We find that knockdown of C/EBPβ in cachexia‐inducing Lewis lung carcinoma cells restores myogenic differentiation (+25%, P < 0.0001) and myotube diameter (+90%, P < 0.0001) in conditioned medium experiments and, in vivo, prevents muscle wasting (−51% for small myofibres vs. controls, P < 0.01; +140% for large myofibres, P < 0.01). Conversely, overexpression of C/EBPβ in non‐cachectic tumours converts their secretome into a cachexia‐inducing one, resulting in reduced myotube diameter (−41%, P < 0.0001, EL4 model) and inhibition of differentiation in culture (−26%, P < 0.01, EL4 model) and muscle wasting in vivo (+98% small fibres, P < 0.001; −76% large fibres, P < 0.001). Comparison of the differently expressed transcripts coding for secreted proteins in C/EBPβ‐overexpressing myoblasts with the secretome from 27 different types of human cancers revealed ~18% similarity between C/EBPβ‐regulated secreted proteins and those secreted by highly cachectic tumours (brain, pancreatic, and stomach cancers). At the protein level, we identified 16 novel secreted factors that are present in human cancer secretomes and are up‐regulated by C/EBPβ. Of these, we tested the effect of three factors (SERPINF1, TNFRSF11B, and CD93) on myotubes and found that all had atrophic potential (−33 to −36% for myotube diameter, P < 0.01). Conclusions We find that C/EBPβ is necessary and sufficient to induce the secretion of cachexia‐inducing factors by cancer cells and loss of C/EBPβ in tumours attenuates muscle atrophy in an animal model of cancer cachexia. Our findings establish C/EBPβ as a central regulator of cancer cachexia and an important therapeutic target.

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