Nitric oxide suppression by secreted frizzled-related protein 2 drives retinoblastoma

分泌型卷曲相关蛋白 2 抑制一氧化氮导致视网膜母细胞瘤

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作者:Panneerselvam Jayabal, Fuchun Zhou, Xiuye Ma, Kathryn M Bondra, Barron Blackman, Susan T Weintraub, Yidong Chen, Patricia Chévez-Barrios, Peter J Houghton, Brenda Gallie, Yuzuru Shiio

Abstract

Retinoblastoma is a cancer of the infant retina primarily driven by loss of the Rb tumor suppressor gene, which is undruggable. Here, we report an autocrine signaling, mediated by secreted frizzled-related protein 2 (SFRP2), which suppresses nitric oxide and enables retinoblastoma growth. We show that coxsackievirus and adenovirus receptor (CXADR) is the cell-surface receptor for SFRP2 in retinoblastoma cells; that CXADR functions as a "dependence receptor," transmitting a growth-inhibitory signal in the absence of SFRP2; and that the balance between SFRP2 and CXADR determines nitric oxide production. Accordingly, high SFRP2 RNA expression correlates with high-risk histopathologic features in retinoblastoma. Targeting SFRP2 signaling by SFRP2-binding peptides or by a pharmacological inhibitor rapidly induces nitric oxide and profoundly inhibits retinoblastoma growth in orthotopic xenograft models. These results reveal a cytokine signaling pathway that regulates nitric oxide production and retinoblastoma cell proliferation and is amenable to therapeutic intervention.

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