Oncotarget

Research Papers:

Rational combination of MEK inhibitor and the STAT3 pathway modulator for the therapy in K-Ras mutated pancreatic and colon cancer cells

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Oncotarget. 2015; 6:14472-14487. https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.3991

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Chengguang Zhao, Hui Xiao, Xiaojuan Wu, Chenglong Li, Guang Liang, Shulin Yang and Jiayuh Lin _

Abstract

Chengguang Zhao1,2,3, Hui Xiao2, Xiaojuan Wu2, Chenglong Li4, Guang Liang3, Shulin Yang1 and Jiayuh Lin2

1 School of Environmental and Biological Engineering, Nanjing University of Science and Technology, Nanjing, Jiangsu, People’s Republic of China

2 Center for Childhood Cancer and Blood Diseases, The Research Institute at Nationwide Children’s Hospital, Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA

3 Chemical Biology Research Center, School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Wenzhou Medical University, University Town, Wenzhou, Zhejiang, People’s Republic of China

4 Division of Medicinal Chemistry and Pharmacognosy, College of Pharmacy, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA

Correspondence to:

Jiayuh Lin, email:

Shulin Yang, email:

Keywords: STAT3; K-Ras; MEK inhibitor; pancreatic cancer; colon cancer

Received: February 23, 2015 Accepted: April 08, 2015 Published: May 04, 2015

Abstract

K-Ras mutations are frequently detected in pancreatic and colon cancers, which are associated with the resistance to MEK inhibitors targeting the Ras pathway. Identifying the underlying mechanisms for the acquired resistance is essential for the future clinical development of MEK inhibitors. Here, we identified that Signal Transducer and Activator of Transcription 3 (STAT3) was significantly activated following the MEK inhibition using AZD6244, PD98059 and Trametinib in K-Ras mutant pancreatic and colon cancer cells. The STAT3 activation may be important for the MEK inhibitor resistance in these K-Ras mutant cancer cells. We have shown that dual inhibition of STAT3 and MEK using the STAT3 inhibitor LY5 and MEK inhibitor Trametinib exerts significant anti-tumor cell efficacy in K-Ras mutant pancreatic and colon cancer cells in vitro. In addition, Trametinib showed increased suppression on tumor growth in vivo in STAT3 knockdown pancreatic cancer cells compared with tumor growth of control cells without STAT3 knockdown. Taken together, our results suggest the induced STAT3 activation as a possible mechanism for the resistance to MEK inhibitor and demonstrate the potentials of a combination therapy using MEK and STAT3 inhibitors in pancreatic and colon cancers harboring K-Ras mutant proteins.


INTRODUCTION

Ras proteins play a direct causal role in human cancers. Oncogenic mutant Ras proteins are highly prevalent in multiple human tumors (~30% of all human tumors), with mutations of K-Ras being the major clinical problem [1]. Oncogenic K-Ras mutations occur in 90% of pancreatic and 45% of colorectal carcinomas [2], and these mutations are associated with the resistance to MEK inhibitors [3, 4]. K-Ras mutations in cancers are localized frequently at codon 12 and much less commonly at codon 13, 17, 34, or 61; COSMIC (Catalogue of Somatic Mutations in Cancer) database [5]. In pancreatic cancer, mutations are essentially seen only at the codon 12, with rare exceptions at codon 13 [5-7]. Mutations at codon 12 are commonly found of substitution of glycine with aspartic acid (G12D), valine (G12V), cysteine (G12C) or others [8] resulting in a conformational change of a protein site located near the bound nucleotide (GTP) and leads to constitutive activation of the mutated Ras proteins independently of growth factor stimulation. In colon cancer, the most frequent mutations in K-Ras are guanine to adenine transitions and guanine to thymine-conversion with 90% of the somatic point mutations occurring at hotspot codon 12 (G12D, 70%) or 13 (G13D, 30%) in exon 1 [9-11]. Moreover, cancers with a high prevalence of K-Ras mutations, such as pancreatic carcinomas, colorectal cancers and lung cancers are difficult to treat. Clinical outcomes are poor even with aggressive and toxic medical interventions [12, 13]. Suppressing K-Ras mutants has become a promising concept for new therapies. Recently, inhibitors of K-Ras mutants have been developed and tested to show some activity in cancer cell lines and tumor models [14, 15]. However, K-Ras mutant have been proven highly difficult to drug, and no small molecular K-Ras mutant inhibitors are available for clinical trials yet. This places the K-Ras mutants target in the so-called difficult-to-drug target category [16, 17]. With the failure of directly inhibiting K-Ras mutant, inhibiting downstream effectors of K-Ras appears a promising alternative [18]. K-Ras signals via downstream effectors such as MAPK, PI3K/AKT and STAT3 signaling cascade [19-21]. It has been shown MAPK signaling plays a more important role in tumor maintenance than PI3K signaling in K-Ras mutant pancreatic and lung tumors [22, 23]. Drug development efforts have mostly focused on components of the classical Ras-activated MAPK pathway. As part of this pathway, MEK1/2, a dual-specific kinase required for activation of ERK1/2, plays crucial roles in tumorigenesis, cell proliferation and inhibition of apoptosis, therefore, MEK1/2 inhibition is an attractive therapeutic strategy in a number of cancers. Inhibiting the downstream effector MEK1/2 has proven to be effective in preclinical studies. Several MEK inhibitors (AZD6244, trametinib and others) have been developed and are under investigation in clinical studies in colon cancer [24-26] and pancreatic cancer [27, 28]. MEK inhibitors have the potential to inhibit tumors dependent on MAPK signaling pathway. Unfortunately, drug resistance limits their efficacy in some patients. Resistance to MEK inhibitors has been reported in pancreatic cancer and colon carcinoma with Ras mutations. However, the underlying mechanism is not very clear. Elucidating the mechanism of cancer cell resistance to MEK inhibitors is critical for the development of more effective therapies.

Our preliminary results have shown that the MEK inhibition in K-Ras mutant pancreatic cancer cells and colon cancer cells unexpectedly induced STAT3 phosphorylation/activation. STAT3 is an oncogene, which is constitutively activated in multiple types of human cancers and contributes to cancer progression [29, 30]. STAT3 activation can stimulate oncogenic transformation in cultured cells and tumor formation in nude mice [31]. In contrast, STAT3 deficient fibroblasts are resistant to transformation by a variety of oncogenes [32, 33]. STAT3 is activated (persistent phosphorylation of STAT3) in many human pancreatic [19, 34, 35] and colon cancer cells [36-41]. However, STAT3 is not persistently active in normal pancreatic tissues and not required for pancreatic development or homeostasis [42]. Activation of STAT3 is also a marker of poor prognosis in human colon cancer [43]. Persistent STAT3 signaling is an attractive target due to its role in regulating cell proliferation, apoptosis, invasion, angiogenesis and immune suppression [29]. Furthermore, STAT3 inhibition can promote apoptosis of human pancreatic [44-48] and colon cancer cells [36, 38, 49] in vitro and in vivo. Since STAT3 phosphorylation/activation can be induced by MEK inhibitors, we hypothesize that the combined treatment with STAT3 and MEK inhibitors would have enhanced therapeutic effects in K-Ras mutant pancreatic cancer and colon cancer cells compared with MEK or STAT3 inhibitor alone.

In this study, we observed that STAT3 pathway activation is a hallmark response to MEK inhibition in K-Ras mutated cells, and found that co­inhibition of STAT3 and MEK mediators could overcome this resistance. Phosphorylation and activation of STAT3 can also occur upstream upon the activation of Janus kinases (JAKs). We further assessed the anti-tumor effects of JAK2/STAT3 inhibitor and MEK inhibitor as single agents and in various combinations in K­-Ras mutated pancreatic and colon cells in vitro, as well as nude mice tumor model in vivo. The results may provide a basis for further development of novel therapeutic strategies for the treatment of K-Ras mutant cancer.

RESULTS

Increased STAT3 and JAK2 phosphorylation induced by MEK inhibitors in K-Ras mutant pancreatic cancer cells

MEK inhibitor, AZD6244, showed activity in K-Ras mutant advanced non-small cell lung cancer in clinical trials [50] and is being investigated for pancreatic cancer therapy in phase II clinical trials [28]. To investigate whether MEK inhibitors activate JAK2/STAT3 signal pathways, we examined the effects of MEK inhibitors in K-Ras mutant cancer cell lines. First, we tested the effects of AZD6244 in K-Ras mutant pancreatic cancer cells. Pancreatic cancer cell lines PANC-1 (G12D) and Capan-1 (G12V) were treated with 10 μM of AZD6244 for 24-72 hours. As expected, AZD6244 effectively inhibited phosphorylated ERK1/2 (P-ERK1/2) in the two cell lines (Figure 1A and 1B). Interestingly, AZD6244 induced STAT3 Tyr705 phosphorylation, P­-STAT3 (Y705), in both PANC-1 and Capan-1 cells at the different time point, but it did not increase P-STAT3(S727) in Capan-1 cell (Figure 1A and 1B). To further determine whether STAT3 activation was associated with MEK inhibition, we tested another small molecule MEK inhibitor PD98059 [51] in a different K-Ras mutant pancreatic cancer cell line, AsPC-1 (G12D). As anticipated, PD98059 increased P-STAT3 (Y705) and P-STAT3 (S727) in AsPC-1 (G12D) cells. However, P-STAT3 (S727) was not markedly increased (Figure 1C). AZD6244 and PD98059 are not approved for clinical use by the FDA. Trametinib, another MEK inhibitor, has been approved for treating melanoma [52, 53]. So, we tested trametinib in the AsPC-1 (G12D) and HPAC (G12D) cells. Similarly, P-STAT3(Y705) was significantly increased in AsPC-1 and HPAC cells after 24 or 48 hours of the treatment with trametinib at different concentrations, while P-STAT3 (S727) was not markedly increased (Figure 1D and 1E). Here, remarkable increases in P-STAT3(Y705) upon MEK inhibition were observed in all four pancreatic cancer cell lines (Figure 1) whereas, slight increases in P-STAT3(S727) were observed in three cancer cell lines (Figure 1A, 1C and 1E). In the Capan-1(Figure 1B) and AsPC-1(Figure 1D) cells, P-STAT3(S727) was virtually unchanged or decreased. These results suggest that activation of STAT3 upon MEK inhibition is mainly by phosphorylation of Tyr705 residue.

Src family kinases have been found to activate STAT3 and linked to drugs resistance in some cell lines and patient samples [54]. We therefore examined the activation of the Src proteins in K-Ras mutant pancreatic cancer cells (AsPC-1 as a representative). In AsPC-1 cells with the treatment of AZD6244, PD98059 or trametinib resulted in a slight increase of P-Src (Y416) (Figure 1C and 1D), suggesting the activation of P-STAT3 may not be dependent on Src family kinases. JAK and GP130 are direct upstream effectors of STAT3. Overexpression of JAK and GP130 can directly activate STAT3 [55]. We also assessed the effect of MEK inhibitors on signal transduction involving the IL6-GP130/JAK/STAT3 pathway. JAK3 phosphorylation and GP130 were moderately increased. Interestingly, P-JAK2 was significantly induced in all investigated pancreatic cancer cell lines (Figure 1C and 1D). Taken together, these results suggest that JAK2 may be the main upstream kinase that activates the STAT3 signaling in response to MEK inhibitors.

MEK inhibitors induce P-STAT3 in K-Ras mutant pancreatic cancer cells.

Figure 1: MEK inhibitors induce P-STAT3 in K-Ras mutant pancreatic cancer cells. (A) PANC-1 cancer cells were treated with AZD6244 (10 µM). After 24 and 48 hr, cell lysates were subjected to western blot with the indicated antibodies. GAPDH served as a loading control. (B) Capan-1 cancer cells were treated with AZD6244 (10 µM). After 24, 48 and 72 hr, total cell protein extracts (60 mg) were subjected to immunoblotting with the indicated antibodies, as described in the materials and methods. GAPDH was a loading control. (C) AsPC-1 cancer cells were treated with or without MEK inhibitors at the indicated dose for 24 hr, and P-JAK3, P-JAK2, P-Src, P-STAT3(Y705), P-STAT3(S727), STAT3, P-ERK1/2, and GP130 levels were determined by western blot. GAPDH was a loading control. (D) AsPC-1 cells were treated with trametinib (1, 5, 10 µM) for 24 hr. The indicated proteins were detected by western blot. GAPDH served as a loading control. (A: AZD6244; P: PD98059; T: trametinib). (E) HPAC cells were treated with trametinib (1, 5µM) for 24 or 48 hr. The indicated proteins were detected by western blot.

Increased STAT3 phosphorylation induced by MEK inhibition in K-Ras mutant colon cancer cells

Trametinib inhibited phosphorylated ERK1/2 (P-ERK1/2) in K-Ras mutant colon cancer cell lines HCT116 (G13D), LS174T (G12D) and DLD-1 (G13D) (Figure 2). Surprisingly, trametinib also induced phosphorylation of STAT3 at Tyr705 (P-­STAT3 Y705), but not P-STAT3 (S727). Trametinib decreased ERK phosphorylation in K-Ras mutant colon cancer cells, while it also induced a strong expression of P-JAK2 and a moderate expression of P-JAK3, the upstream kinases that phosphorylate STAT3 (HCT116 cells as a representative, Figure 2C). However we did not observe increases in Src phosphorylation in K-Ras mutant colon cancer cells. Our novel results suggest that the activated/phosphorylated Tyr705 of STAT3 (P­-STAT3 Y705) promotes cancer cell survival and causes feed-back resistance to MEK inhibitors.

MEK inhibition induces STAT3 phosphorylation in K-Ras mutant colon cancer cells.

Figure 2: MEK inhibition induces STAT3 phosphorylation in K-Ras mutant colon cancer cells. (A) LS174T cells were treated with 1 and 5 µM trametinib (T) for 72 hr. P-STAT3 (Y705), STAT3 and P-ERK1/2 expression and activity levels were determined by western blotting. (B) DLD-1 cells were treated with 1 and 5 µM trametinib (T) for 72 hr. P-STAT3 (Y705), STAT3 and P-ERK1/2 expression and activity levels were determined by western blotting. (C) HCT116 cells were treated with 1, 5, 10 µM trametinib (T) for 24 hr. Proteins expression and activity levels were determined by western blotting. GAPDH served as the loading control.

JAK2/STAT3 activation is key mediators of resistance to MEK inhibitors in K-Ras mutant cells

Activation of STAT3 can be through one of these kinases, JAK2, JAK3 or the Src family kinases. To explore the molecular significance and therapeutic implications of mutations in the K-Ras pathway, we also assessed the phosphorylation of ERK and STAT3 after treatment with those kinases inhibitors. Cancer cell line HCT116 was treated with trametinib (5μM) alone, or in combination with one of the following agents: ruxolitinib (2.5μM, JAK2 inhibitor), tofacitinib (2.5μM, JAK3 inhibitor) or KX2-391 (2.5μM, Src inhibitor). Under these conditions, ERK phosphorylation was inhibited in the presence of trametinib (Figure 3). However, STAT3 phosphorylation was also induced by trametinib along with the MEK inhibition in the HCT116 cells. Expectedly, increased STAT3 phosphorylation induced by trametinib was down regulated by ruxolitinib (JAK2) inhibition, and partially by tofacitinib (JAK3) inhibition. But the phosphorylation of STAT3 was not decreased by the inhibition of Src family kinases in the cell lines (Figure 3A). These results suggest that the trametinib-induced phosphorylation of STAT3 may through the JAK2/STAT3 signal transduction pathway.

We also performed immunoblots to gauge the effects of a combination of MEK inhibitor and JAK2 inhibitor in the K-Ras mutant HCT116 cell lines (Figure 3B). When cells were treated with trametinib in combination with ruxolitinib (JAK2 inhibitor), the trametinib induced activation of STAT3 was inhibited. Given the promising response of HCT116 cells to the dual inhibition of the JAK2/STAT3 and MEK/ERK pathways, we further investigated the effects of a combination of the STAT3-selective inhibitor LY5 and the MEK inhibitor trametinib in K-Ras mutant cell lines (Figure 3C). The combined treatment of LY5 and trametinib also synergistically inhibited ERK phosphorylation and STAT3 activation induced by trametinib in the HCT116 cell line. These findings provide additional evidence for that STAT3 activation in response to MEK inhibition mediates the antagonistic effects of the MEK inhibitors in K-Ras mutant colon cells.

Efficacy of JAK2 and STAT3 inhibitors in K-Ras mutant HCT116 cells to block feedback-induced phosphorylation of STAT3 induced by MEK inhibitor.

Figure 3: Efficacy of JAK2 and STAT3 inhibitors in K-Ras mutant HCT116 cells to block feedback-induced phosphorylation of STAT3 induced by MEK inhibitor. (A) Western blot (WB) of phosphorylated STAT3 (P-STAT3), phosphorylated ERK (P-ERK), total STAT3 and GAPDH in HCT116 K-Ras mutant (G13D) cells after overnight treatment with different inhibitors (T: trametinib, K: KX2-391, R: ruxolitinib, Tofa: tofacitinib). (B) HCT116 cells were treated with trametinib (5 µM) alone or in combination with ruxolitinib (2.5 µM) for 24 hr, and P-STAT3(Y705), STAT3 and P-ERK1/2 was determined by WB. (C) HCT116 cells were treatment with trametinib (5 µM) or combined LY5 for 24 hr, and P-STAT3(Y705), STAT3 and P-ERK1/2 levels were determined by WB. GAPDH served as a loading control.

Effect of the expression of STAT3 protein on MEK inhibition

To confirm the essential role of the STAT3 pathway in resistance to MEK inhibition, we knocked down STAT3 in K-Ras mutant AsPC-1 cell line. In cell viability assays, knockdown of STAT3 in the AsPC-1 cells resulted in enhanced sensitivity to AZD6244/trametinib. The knockdown cell lines, AsPC-1 (STAT3-shRNA), showed that the half-maximum inhibitory concentration (IC50) were at least 5-fold lower than their parental cells (AsPC-1) and control cells (AsPC-1, vector) (Figure 4). MEK inhibition had small effects in the parental cells AsPC-1 and the control AsPC-1(vector), while it had significant effects on inhibiting cell viability of the AsPC-1(STAT3-shRNA) cell lines. These results suggest that activation of STAT3 stimulated by MEK inhibition is necessary for cancer cell survival. Therefore, STAT3’s inhibition may be a potential strategy for overcoming the MEK inhibitor resistance. We then examined the expression levels and phosphorylation of STAT3 protein after MEK inhibition. In control cells AsPC-1 (vector), increasing doses of trametinib for 24 hours caused a decrease in P-ERK, but an increase of P-STAT3 (Y705). In AsPC-1 (STAT3-shRNA), P-ERK was also inhibited by the treatments (Figure 4), but no P-STAT3 (Y705) was detected.

Knocking down STAT3 expression using RNA interference, resulted in enhanced sensitivity to MEK inhibitors.

Figure 4: Knocking down STAT3 expression using RNA interference, resulted in enhanced sensitivity to MEK inhibitors. AsPC-1 cells were infected with shRNA against STAT3 and non-targeted shRNA (Vector). Those cancer cell lines were treated with trametinib at the indicated dose for 24 hr. The expressions of P-STAT3, P-ERK1/2 and STAT3 were detected on western blots, GAPDH served as a loading control. IC50 was determined as described in the materials and methods.

To further validate our hypothesis and verify that the effect of resistance to MEK inhibitors is correlated to STAT3 activation, we stably express a known constitutively active STAT3, STAT3-C [31], in cancer cells. The inhibition of cell viability of AZD6244 in AsPC-1 cells was also partially reversed by the transfection with STAT3-C expression (Figure 5). AsPC-1 (Vector) cells not transferred with STAT3-C are still relatively sensitive to AZD6244 inhibition. Our results show that STAT3-C can at least partially rescue MEK inhibition. These results provide additional evidence to support that the resistance to MEK inhibitors is through the induction of endogenous STAT3 protein in cancer cells. Collectively, knockdown of STAT3 in AsPC-1 cells significantly sensitized the cells to AZD6244 and trametinib treatment, and activation of the STAT3 pathway by the constitutively active STAT3 induced the resistance to AZD6244. These results suggest that STAT3 pathway activation may play an important role in developing resistance to MEK inhibitors.

Constitutively active STAT3, STAT3-C reversed the inhibition induced by AZD6244 in AsPC-1 cells.

Figure 5: Constitutively active STAT3, STAT3-C reversed the inhibition induced by AZD6244 in AsPC-1 cells. Cloned AsPC-1 cells with or without STAT3-C expression vector, followed by AZD6244 treatment at the indicated concentration for 24 (A) or 48 (B) hr. MTT assay was used to analyze cell viability. Error bars indicate SD of mean.

Combinational inhibition of MEK and STAT3 pathways in K-Ras mutant pancreatic and colon cancer cells

Biochemical feedback loops and cross-talk may drive primary resistance to MEK-inhibitors [56, 57]. This provides a rationale for combining MEK-inhibitors with Raf, PI3K, FGFR or EGFR inhibitors [58]. Since STAT3 signaling is involved in cell survival and drug resistance [10, 59-61], the undesired STAT3 activation by MEK inhibitors could potentially introduce resistance to MEK inhibitors in clinical trials. Therefore, this novel finding provides a rationale for a combination of MEK inhibitors and STAT3 pathway modulators to afford more effective therapy of K-Ras mutant cancer.

Because JAK2 coordinately mediate MEK inhibitors that induced P-STAT3, this induction was inhibited by combinational treatment of ruxolitinib or LY5 as detected by western blot analysis (Figure 3). To examine whether the resistance can be reversed by JAK2/STAT3 inhibition, combination of several small molecular inhibitors were investigated to inhibit both the MEK and STAT3 pathways. AsPC-1 cell viability assays were assessed upon exposure to the different agents alone and in combination. As shown in Figure 6A, AsPC-1 cell viability was remarkably reduced with the combination of MEK inhibitor (AZD6244) and JAK1/2 inhibitor (ruxolitinib). In contrast, MEK inhibitor or JAK1/2 inhibitor as a single agent was not very effective on cancer cell viability. Similar results were obtained by co-treatment with trametinib and ruxolitinib (Figure 6A). The synergistic effects were also obtained by the combined treatment of LY5 and trametinib in AsPC-1 and Capan-1 cells (Figure 6B). The rationale to choose LY5 in our studies is that LY5 is a potent STAT3-selective small molecular inhibitor. LY5 alone (or knockdown STAT3) did not inhibit P-ERK1/2 but appeared to slightly induce P-ERK1/2 (Figure 4), and AZD6244 or trametinib alone, as well as the combination blocked P-ERK1/2. Similar results were observed with a combination of MEK and STAT3 inhibitors in K-Ras mutant HCT-116 and LS174T colorectal cancer cells (Figure 6C), which further support the hypothesis that inhibiting dual MEK and STAT3 pathways in K-Ras mutant cells can increase sensitivity to MEK inhibitors.

Combinational treatment decrease viability of K-Ras mutant cancer cell lines.fig6bfig6c

Figure 6: Combinational treatment decrease viability of K-Ras mutant cancer cell lines. (A) AsPC-1 cells were seeded in 96-well plate at a density of 3000 cells per well and cultured for 24 hr. Cells were treated with trametinib/AZD6244 or/and ruxolitinib at the indicated concentration in triplicate for 24 hr and processed for MTT assay to analyze cell viability. (B) AsPC-1 and Capan-1 cells were seeded the same way as described in A. Cells were treated with trametinib or/and LY5 at the indicated concentration in triplicate for 24 hr to detect the combination effects of LY5 and trametinib using MTT assay. (C) HCT116 and LS174T cells were seeded the same as described in A. Cells were treated by trametinib/AZD6244 or/and LY5 at the indicated concentration in triplicate for 48 or 72 hours to detect the combination effects of LY5 and trametinib using MTT assay. Error bars indicate SD of mean. (* P < 0.05, ** P < 0.01, *** P < 0.001, **** P< 0.0001).

Combinational inhibition of MEK and STAT3 pathways reduces colony forming and cell migration ability

We found that the combination of STAT3 and MEK inhibitors enhanced inhibition of cell viability compared with the treatment of a single agent in all tested cell lines (Figure 6). Blocking STAT3 activation by a combination of STAT3 inhibition (ruxolitinib or LY5) and MEK inhibition, showed a synergistic antitumor effect in K-Ras mutant cell lines. Therefore, we next sought to investigate whether combination treatment may also inhibit the colony formation capability. AsPC-1 cells were treated with AZD6244, LY5 or the combination of the two for 2 hours. After the treatment, the same number of viable cancer cells was seeded at very low cell densities (1000 cells/60mm dish) and cultured in fresh medium without drugs for 2 weeks. Cells were then fixed and stained and the plates were scanned. As shown in Figure 7A, the cancer cells showed a decreased ability to recover and form colonies following combination treatment with AZD6244 and LY5. The results demonstrate that the combination treatment exhibited stronger inhibition of the colony forming ability than a single agent, and indicate the benefit and rationale to block both MEK and STAT3 oncogenic pathways in K-Ras mutant pancreatic cancer cells.

Cell migration is an important process in tumor metastasis. In order to assess the effect of a dual inhibition of MEK and STAT3 pathways on cell migratory ability, a wound healing assay was performed on HPAC, HCT116 and DLD-1 cells. As shown in Figure 7B, after the creation of a wound, cells were treated with different inhibitors and allowed to grow and migrate into the wound for 24 hours. HPAC cells migrated to fill the scratched area within 24 hours. Treatment with LY5 or trametinib also resulted in a decreased ability for cells to migrate and heal the created wound, but the combined treatment of trametinib and LY5 completely prevented this migration. Consistent with above result, co-treatment also significantly blocked HCT116 and DLD-1 cells to migrate through scratched area (Figure 7C and 7D).

Combinational inhibition of MEK and STAT3 pathways reduces colony forming ability and cell migration.fig7bfig7cfig7d

Figure 7: Combinational inhibition of MEK and STAT3 pathways reduces colony forming ability and cell migration. (A) AsPC-1 cells were treated with drugs (A10: AZD6244 10µM, L0.5: LY5 0.5µM) or DMSO for 2 hours. After the treatment, cells were counted and the same number of cells were seeded and cultured for 2-3 week. Colonies were fixed by ice-cold methanol and were stained by 1% crystal violet. (B) Wound healing assay for migration was carried out by scratching the cells with yellow tip when HPAC grew into monolayer. Then, cells were treated with trametinib, LY5 or the combination of the two and allowed to migrate into the scratched area for 24 hours (T1: trametinib 1µM, L2: LY5 2µM). (C) Wound healing assay as described in materials and methods was conducted for migration in HCT116 cells treated with the indicated concentrations of inhibitors (T1: trametinib 1µM, L2: LY5 2µM). After 12 hours, growth medium was replaced with a fresh complete DMEM medium with 10% FBS. (D) Wound healing assay as described in C was conducted for migration in DLD-1 (T1: trametinib 1µM, L1: LY5 1µM). The arrow showed the gap of scratched area and the percentage of migrating cells in wound healing assay was quantified. Inset 100 x magnification.

Co-inhibition of the STAT3 and MEK signaling pathways inhibits the tumor growth of K-Ras mutant xenograft models

To determine the impact of STAT3 inhibition on tumor growth in vivo, we subcutaneously injected AsPC-1(STAT3-shRNA) and AsPC-1(Vector) cells into nude mice on either side of the abdomen. Mice were then treated with trametinib by daily oral gavage. Knockdown STAT3 (STAT3-shRNA) did not reduce the size of xenograft tumors compared with AsPC-1(Vector) group. In contrast, simultaneous inhibition of MEK and STAT3 (S + T) significantly reduced tumor growth compared to those control groups (Figure 8A curve in blue). Interestingly, in the (S + T) group with a dual inhibition, tumors appeared to grow slightly at the beginning, but remained essentially static over the 5 weeks’ treatment. Although trametinib-treated AsPC-1(Vector) xenografts (V + T) impaired tumor growth, its effect was not stronger than in AsPC-1(STAT3-shRNA) xenografts (S + T) mice (Figure 8A and 8B). The result suggests that MEK or STAT3 signaling pathway alone is able to maintain proliferation. Inhibiting only one of the MEK and STAT3 signaling pathways would not be effective. Therefore, in vivo, a dual inhibition of MEK and STAT3 signaling pathways would be much more effective in K-Ras mutant cancer cells. Taken together, both in vitro and in vivo results suggest that STAT3 plays a critical role in K-Ras mutant cells in response to agents inhibiting MEK. We did not observe any statistically significant changes in body weight of mice used in the experiments (Figure 8C). Immunoblotting analyses were done to confirm the mechanisms of action of trametinib. Interestingly, P-ERK was increased in the knockdown STAT3 group, which is consistent with what observed in cell experiments (Figure 8D).

Anti-tumor effects of dual inhibition of STAT3 and MEK signaling in AsPC-1 xenograft model, tumor growth is shown.

Figure 8: Anti-tumor effects of dual inhibition of STAT3 and MEK signaling in AsPC-1 xenograft model, tumor growth is shown. Mice bearing AsPC-1-vector (V) and AsPC-1 STAT3-shRNA (S) tumors were treated with trametinib for 32 days. (A) Tumor volumes (mm3) and (B) Tumor weights (g) were recorded. Error bars indicate SD of mean. (C) Body weight of each mice was recorded. (D) P-ERK1/2, P-STAT3 and total STAT3 was measured in the isolated tumor samples by western blot, GAPDH served as a loading control. (T: trametinib, * P <0.05, **** P < 0.0001).

DISCUSSION

Activating K-Ras mutations occur at a frequency of 90% in pancreatic and 45% in colorectal carcinomas. Currently, there have been no specific inhibitors for this oncogene [2]. Efforts to block oncogenic Ras activity are focused on downstream pathways. Inhibiting the downstream effector MEK1/2 has proven to be effective in preclinical and clinical studies in patients with melanoma, pancreatic, colon and lung cancers. So far, 11 MEK inhibitors have entered clinical trials. Among them, trametinib has been approved as cancer therapies [62]. Unfortunately, the clinical success of MEK inhibitors as single agents has often been limited by toxicity, low efficacy and drug resistance in K-Ras mutant cancers. Recently, more evidence has emerged to suggest that feedback activation of other pathway may limit the efficacy of MEK inhibitors in K-Ras mutated cancers [63]. Despite intensive study, the molecular and genetic mechanisms for drug resistance remain poorly understood. Preclinical studies have identified distinct mechanisms by which cells acquire resistance to MEK inhibition, including amplification of mutant BRAF [64], PI3K upregulation [23], EGFR activation [54] or mutations in the allosteric pocket of MEK, which can directly block the inhibitor binding to the MEK kinase or induce constitutive MEK kinase activity. Dual inhibition of these pathways has provided benefit in some patients [65]. In this study, we identified the JAK2/STAT3 pathway as a key mediator of the resistance to MEK inhibition in K-Ras mutant pancreatic and colon cancer cells.

The mechanism of STAT3 activation following MEK inhibitor treatment appeared complex. We initially identified that the MEK inhibitor AZD6244 stimulated phosphorylation of STAT3 mainly at Tyr705 residue. Since AZD6244 is not approved for cancer therapy, we then confirmed our observations with the FDA approved MEK selective inhibitor trametinib, which showed similar results of activating STAT3 mainly through Tyr705 phosphorylation. In tumors, where STAT3 was implicated for oncogenesis, activation of STAT3 was found to be the result of phosphorylation at both Ty705 and Ser727 residues. The role of STAT3 phosphorylation at Ty705 in tumorigenesis is well established. However, the function of phosphorylated Ser727 remains controversial at the moment. Our results indicate that MEK inhibition induced marked Tyr705 phosphorylation but only a slight Ser727 phosphorylation in the majority of K-Ras mutant cancer cell lines. The differences we found in Tyr705 and Ser727 phosphorylation of STAT3 are in line with the latter report [66], supporting the Tyr705 phosphorylation as an activating factor. The function of Ser727 phosphorylation may depend on the specific gene and cell type.

We further confirmed that inhibition of the STAT3 pathway by STAT3-specific shRNA or LY5 [67, 68] sensitized K-Ras mutated cancer cells to MEK inhibitor treatment in vitro and in vivo. In our study, stable cell lines expressing shRNA constructs against STAT3 in the K-Ras mutant AsPC-1 cell lines enhanced sensitivity to AZD6244 and trametinib, and activation of the STAT3 pathway with the constitutively active form of STAT3 induced resistance to AZD6244. Also, inhibiting the STAT3 pathway by LY5 enhances the ability of MEK inhibitors to inhibit cancer cell viability. Small molecule inhibitors that directly inhibit STAT3 are not yet approved by FDA for therapeutic use. However, compounds that inhibit upstream effectors of the STAT3 pathway, such as RTKs, Src and JAKs, are clinically available. Interestingly, our study shows that inhibiting Src or JAK3 does not cause extensive cell death compared with inhibiting STAT3 directly. In contrast, JAK2 inhibitor, ruxolitinib, significantly suppressed tumor cells viability in the K-Ras mutant cancer cells, which indicates that JAK2-STAT3 signaling contributes to the drug resistance in this model. Consistent with our findings, a combination of MEK and JAK2 inhibitors showed remarkable anti-cancer activity in these K-Ras mutant cancer cells [69, 70].

Our study indicates that inhibition of the single SAT3 or MEK pathway in the xenograft assay did not markedly reduce tumor growth, but dual inhibition of STAT3 and MEK pathways resulted in significant suppression of tumors, with subsequent slight tumor growth, and stop growing over the 5 weeks after treatment. The STAT3 shRNA tumors, however, showed a marked increase in phosphorylation of ERK after knockdown STAT3. The results suggested that ERK activation could compensate with the STAT3 inhibition to maintain proliferation and survival. This may also explain that knocking down STAT3 group alone did not reduce the size of xenograft tumors compared with AsPC-1(Vector) group.

CONCLUSIONS

In conclusion, we explored novel compensatory mechanisms by which K-Ras mutant cells resist the MEK inhibitors. Our results provide the new evidence for the MEK inhibition can increase the expression and activation of STAT3 in K-Ras mutant pancreatic and colon cancer cells. Using genetic, functional, and pharmacologic inhibition, we have demonstrated that dual inhibition of STAT3 and MEK signaling pathways significantly reduced viability of pancreatic and colon cancer cells. Our study not only provides insight into the molecular mechanism of MEK inhibitor resistance but also suggests a novel combination therapy of STAT3 and MEK inhibitors could be a potential therapeutic strategy for preventing and/or overcoming resistance of MEK inhibitor in patients with colorectal and pancreatic cancers.

MATERIALs AND METHODS

Inhibitor drugs

Selumetinib (AZD6244, MEK inhibitor), trametinib (GSK1120212, MEK inhibitor), KX2-391 (Src inhibitor) and tofacitinib (CP-690550, JAK3 inhibitor) were purchased from Selleck Chemicals (Houston, TX, USA). PD98059 (MEK inhibitor) and ruxolitinib (INCB081424, JAK1/2 inhibitor) were purchased from LC Laboratories (Woburn, MA, USA). LY5 (STAT3 inhibitor [67]) was synthesized by Chenglong Li’s Lab (College of Pharmacy, The Ohio State University). The drug compounds were dissolved in sterile dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) to make a 20 mM stock solution stored at -20˚C.

Cell culture

Human pancreatic cancer cell lines (PANC-1, HPAC and AsPC-1) and human colon cancer cell lines (HCT116, LS174T and DLD-1) were purchased from ATCC (the American Type Culture Collection, Manassas, VA, USA). All above cell lines were maintained in Dulbecco’s Modified Eagle Medium (DMEM) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS) and 1% Penicillin/Streptomycin. The Capan-1 cell lines was provided by Dr. Mitch Phelps (The Ohio State University) and cultured in Iscove’s Modified Dubecco’s Medium (IMDM) supplemented with 20% FBS and 1% Penicillin/Streptomycin. All cell lines were cultured in a humidified 37 ˚C incubator with 5% CO2. Heat-inactivated fetal bovine serum (FBS), penicillin-streptomycin antibiotic, Dulbecco’s Modified Eagle Medium (DMEM) containing 4.5g/L D-glucose, L-glutamine and sodium pyruvate, OptiMEM reduced serum medium and Iscove’s Modified Dubecco’s Medium (IMDM), both containing L-glutamine, were all purchased from Gibco (Grand Island, NY).

Cell transfection

shRNA knockdown: The human STAT3 gene-specific shRNA plasmid, along with control shRNA plasmids were purchased from Addgene. Stable clones were prepared by transfecting AsPC-1 cells in 6-well dishes with 3 μg of each of the shRNA plasmids, using Lipofectamine 2000 transfection reagent (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA), according to manufacturer’s instructions. Briefly, in each well of 6-well plates, 2.0 × 105 AsPC-1 cells were grown in 2 mL DMEM culture medium without antibiotics to 50 - 70% confluence. Growth medium was replaced with 2 mL of freshly prepared Opti-MEM medium. Cells were then transfected with 3.0 μg of shRNA plasmid using 10 μL Lipofectamine 2000 Reagent. At 6 hours post-transfection, growth medium was replaced with a fresh complete DMEM medium with 10% FBS. 72 hours after transfection, the cells were placed under selection with 4.0µg/ml of puromycin, splitting 1:5 when the cells reached confluency. Clones from the transfected cells were isolated and grown under puromycin. Western blot assay was used to detect the expression of P-STAT3 and STAT3 in the cells.

STAT3-C transfection: The STAT3-C (a murine STAT3) was a constitutively active form of STAT3, which was cloned into vector with a Flag epitope [31]. AsPC-1 cells were plated in 6-well plate and grew to 70 - 90% confluence. Cells were then transfected with 3.0 μg of STAT3-C plasmid using 10 μL Lipofectamine 2000 Reagent in opti-MEM. After overnight transfection, growth medium was replaced with a fresh complete DMEM medium with 10% FBS. 48 hours after transfection, cells were split 1:5~1:50 into single cell. After 72 hours, transfected cells were placed under selection with 400µg/ml of G418. Clones from the transfected cells were isolated and grown under G418. Colones were confirmed by Western Blotting analysis. AsPC-1 cells expressing constitutive STAT3 were treated with AZD6244 (1–25µM) or DMSO. Cell viability was determined by MTT assay in 96-well plates as described in this paper.

MTT cell viability assay

Cells were seeded in 96-well plates at a density of 3000 cells per well and cultured for 24 hours. For cell viability experiment, different concentrations of drugs were added in triplicate to the plates for 24-72 hours at 37 ˚C. 3-(4, 5-Dimethylthiazolyl)-2, 5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide (MTT) viability assay was done according to manufacturer’s protocol (Roche Diagnostics, Mannheim, Germany). The absorbance was read at 595 nm. Half-maximal inhibitory concentrations (IC50) were determined using Sigma Plot 9.0 software (Systat Software Inc., San Jose, CA). Each experiment was repeated 3 times. Data are given as mean ± SD.

Western blot analysis

Cells were harvested after treatment with drugs or DMSO at 60-80% confluence for 24-72 hours then lysed in cold RIPA lysis buffer containing a cocktail of protease inhibitors and phosphatase inhibitor. The lysates were subjected to 10% or 12% SDS-PAGE gel and transferred to a PVDF membrane. Membranes were incubated with a 1:1000 dilution of specific primary antibody and 1:10000 HRP conjugated secondary antibody. Primary antibodies including phospho-STAT3 (Tyrosine 705), phospho-STAT3 (Ser727), STAT3, phospho-AKT (Serine 473), phospho-ERK1/2 (Threonine 202/Tyrosine 204), phospho-JAK2(Tyr1007/1008), phospho-JAK3 (Tyr980/981), phospho-Src (Tyrosine 416) and GAPDH, and secondary antibody are all from Cell Signaling Technology (Beverly, MA, USA). Membranes were analyzed using enhanced chemiluminescence Plus reagents and scanned with the Storm Scanner (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech Inc, Piscataway, NJ).

Colony formation assay

Cells were grown to 60–80% confluent in 10 cm plates and then pre-treated with drugs or DMSO for 2-6 hours. Then the treated cells were trypsinized, stained with trypan blue and counted. 1000 cells were then seeded in 60 mm plates in duplicate and allowed to grow for 2-3 weeks until the colonies were visible. Cells were washed with PBS twice and fixed with cold methanol at -20 °C for 10 min. Cells were then stained with 1% crystal violet (25% methanol) at room temperature for 10 min. After the staining, the plates were washed with distill water and dried.

Cell migration assay (in vitro wound-healing assay)

HPAC, DLD-1 and HCT-116 cells migration were detected using the wound-healing assay described by Xiao et al. [68]. Briefly, when cells grew into confluent monolayer in plate, we scratched the cells in same width using yellow tip and washed once to remove non-adherent cells. After washing, cells treated with LY5 (2µΜ/1µΜ), trametinib (1μM) or DMSO. Cells were allowed to migrate into scratched area for 24-72 hours and images were captured with a microscopic camera system. The percentage of wound healing was calculated by the equation: (percent wound healing) = average of [(gap area: 0 hour) −; (gap area: 24-72 hours)]/ (gap area: 0 hours) [68].

Animal studies

All animal studies were conducted in accordance with the standard procedures approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC) of the Research Institute at Nationwide Children’s Hospital (Columbus, OH). The approved protocols were designed to minimize the numbers of mice used and to minimize any pain or distress. Mice were acclimatized at the Animal Facility for 1 week before being injected with cancer cells. For analysis of tumorigenicity, AsPC-1(vector) control or AsPC-1 STAT3 shRNA cells (5×106 cells/mice) were mixed with an equal volume of PBS and Matrigel (Invitrogen) in a total of 100 μL and were injected subcutaneously into the flank of 6-week-old, weighing 20 to 25 g, athymic female nude mice. All mice were maintained under barrier conditions. After 1 week, tumor mass reaching 6 mm in diameter was judged as a successful model and mice were randomly divided into four groups (n=4). Drug treated group of animals were given MEK inhibitor trametinib 0.30mg/kg/day [drug in 5%DMSO, 10%Kolliphor®HS15 and 85% (20% (2-Hydroxypropyl)-b2;-cyclodextrin)] by daily oral gavage. The first day of drug treatment was termed day 0. The maximum diameter (a) and minimum diameter (b) of the tumor were measured with a vernier caliper every 2 days, and at the same time, the behavior, diet, and weight of nude mice were observed. The tumor volume (V) was calculated according to the formula: volume = (π/6) ab2. At the end of treatments, tumors were harvested from euthanized mice, snap-frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored in -80oC. Tumors tissue homogenates were lysed and separated by SDS-PAGE to examine the expression of P-ERK and P-STAT3.

Statistical analysis

Significance of correlations was done using GraphPad Prism software. Unpaired t tests were used for analyses assuming Gaussian populations with a 95% confidence interval. Data are presented as mean ± SD. Differences were analyzed with the Student t test, and significance was set at P < 0.05.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This research was supported in part by the NIH/NCI/R21 CA173473-01, AACR-Pancreatic cancer Network research grant and National Natural Science Funding of China (81202462 and 81302642). This research was also supported by OSUCCC DDI and the Technology Development Fund from The Research Institute at Nationwide Children’s Hospital. We thank Dr. Huameng Li for helpful discussions and editing with the manuscript.

CONFLICTs INTEREST

The authors declare that they have no competing interest.

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