Identification of heparin-binding EGF-Like growth factor (HB-EGF) as a Biomarker for lysophosphatidic acid receptor type 1 (LPA1) activation in human breast and prostate cancers

Marion David, Debashish Sahay, Florence Mege, Françoise Descotes, Raphaël Leblanc, Johnny Ribeiro, Philippe Cleźardin, Olivier Peyruchaud

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

26 Scopus citations

Abstract

Lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) is a natural bioactive lipid with growth factor-like functions due to activation of a series of six G protein-coupled receptors (LPA1-6). LPA receptor type 1 (LPA1) signaling influences the pathophysiology of many diseases including cancer, obesity, rheumatoid arthritis, as well as lung, liver and kidney fibrosis. Therefore, LPA1 is an attractive therapeutic target. However, most mammalian cells co-express multiple LPA receptors whose co-activation impairs the validation of target inhibition in patients because of missing LPA receptor-specific biomarkers. LPA1 is known to induce IL-6 and IL-8 secretion, as also do LPA2 and LPA3. In this work, we first determined the LPA induced early-gene expression profile in three unrelated human cancer cell lines expressing different patterns of LPA receptors (PC3: LPA1,2,3,6; MDA-MB-231: LPA1,2; MCF-7: LPA 2,6). Among the set of genes upregulated by LPA only in LPA 1-expressing cells, we validated by QPCR and ELISA that upregulation of heparin-binding EGF-like growth factor (HB-EGF) was inhibited by LPA 1-3 antagonists (Ki16425, Debio0719). Upregulation and downregulation of HB-EGF mRNA was confirmed in vitro in human MDA-B02 breast cancer cells stably overexpressing LPA1 (MDA-B02/LPA1) and downregulated for LPA1 (MDA-B02/shLPA1), respectively. At a clinical level, we quantified the expression of LPA1 and HB-EGF by QPCR in primary tumors of a cohort of 234 breast cancer patients and found a significantly higher expression of HB-EGF in breast tumors expressing high levels of LPA1. We also generated human xenograph prostate tumors in mice injected with PC3 cells and found that a five-day treatment with Ki16425 significantly decreased both HB-EGF mRNA expression at the primary tumor site and circulating human HB-EGF concentrations in serum. All together our results demonstrate that HB-EGF is a new and relevant biomarker with potentially high value in quantifying LPA1 activation state in patients receiving anti-LPA1 therapies.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere97771
JournalPLoS ONE
Volume9
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - 14 May 2014
Externally publishedYes

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