| (84) |
Designated Contracting States: |
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AT BE CH CY DE DK ES FI FR GB GR IE IT LI LU MC NL PT SE |
| (30) |
Priority: |
16.08.1999 EP 99116056 14.12.1999 US 461090
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| (43) |
Date of publication of application: |
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29.05.2002 Bulletin 2002/22 |
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Divisional application: |
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06020038.3 / 1820500 |
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Proprietor: Max-Planck-Gesellschaft zur Förderung
der Wissenschaften e.V. |
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80539 München (DE) |
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Inventors: |
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- ULLRICH, Axel
D-80799 München (DE)
- PRENZEL, Norbert
D-81375 München (DE)
- DAUB, Henrik
D-93057 Regensburg (DE)
- ZWICK-WALLASCH, Esther
D-81375 München (DE)
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| (74) |
Representative: Weiss, Wolfgang et al |
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Weickmann & Weickmann
Patentanwälte
Postfach 86 08 20 81635 München 81635 München (DE) |
| (56) |
References cited: :
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25 May 1999 (1999-05-25), pages 6235-6240, XP002136687 ISSN: 0027-8424
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sensitive to a metalloprotease inhibitor" JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, vol. 273,
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JOURNAL, vol. 16, no. 23, 1997, pages 7032-7044, XP002136690 cited in the application
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884-888, XP002136695
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INHIBITS SPECIFICALLY ITS MITOGENIC ACTIVITY" JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, AMERICAN
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October 2003 MADARAME JUN ET AL: 'Transactivation of epidermal growth factor receptor
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of prostate cancer cells promoted by bombesin.' Database accession no. PREV200400016632
& PROSTATE, vol. 57, no. 3, 6 October 2003 (2003-10-06), pages 187-195, ISSN: 0270-4137
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epidermal growth factor receptor to promote migration and invasion." ONCOGENE, vol.
23, no. 4, 29 January 2004 (2004-01-29), pages 991-999, ISSN: 0950-9232
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promoting colon cancer growth and gastrointestinal hypertrophy" NATURE MEDICINE, vol.
8, no. 3, March 2002 (2002-03), pages 289-293, ISSN: 1078-8956
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Ovarian Cancer Therapy" CANCER RESEARCH, AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR CANCER REREARCH,
US LNKD- DOI:10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-04-0811, vol. 64, no. 16, 15 August 2004 (2004-08-15),
pages 5720-5727, XP003000585 ISSN: 0008-5472
- MASANORI ASAKURA ET AL: "Cardiac hypertrophy is inhibited by antagonism of ADAM12
processing of HB- EGF: Metalloproteinase inhibitors as a new therapy" NATURE MEDICINE,
NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP, NEW YORK, NY, US LNKD- DOI:10.1038/NM0102-35, vol. 8, no.
1, 1 January 2002 (2002-01-01) , pages 35-40, XP002965243 ISSN: 1078-8956
- LUI VIVIAN WAI YAN ET AL: "Mitogenic effects of gastrin-releasing peptide in head
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[0001] The present invention relates to the use of a modulation which acts on a growth-factor
precursor, namely HB - EGF for the manufacture of a medicament for treating cancer.
[0002] Crosstalk between different signalling systems allows the integration of a great
diversity of stimuli that a cell receives under varying physiological situations.
Transactivation of EGF receptor-dependent signalling pathways upon stimulation of
G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCR) which are critical for the mitogenic activity of
ligands such as LPA, endothelin, thrombin, bombesin and carbachol represents evidence
for such an interconnected communication network. The mechanism of this cross-communication
is not understood, but based on reported data it was proposed to be transmitted by
intracellular elements
1-4
Dong et al (Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, Vol.96, pp. 6235-6240, 1999) describe that metalloproteinase-mediated ligand release regulates autocrine signaling
through the epidermal growth factor receptor.
[0003] We report here that activation of growth-factor receptors such as epidermal growth-factor
receptor (EGFR) upon GPCR stimulation requires the receptor's extracellular domain.
As key element of this mechanism we identify a membrane-spanning growth-factor ligand
precursor, such as proHB-EGF, and a proteinase activity that is rapidly induced upon
GPCR-ligand interaction. We show that inhibition of growth-factor precursor processing
blocks GPCR-induced growth-factor receptor transactivation and downstream signals.
As evidence for the pathophysiological significance of this mechanism we demonstrate
inhibition of constitutive EGFR activity upon treatment of human PC-3 prostate carcinoma
cells with the metalloproteinase inhibitor batimastat. Together, these results establish
a new mechanistic concept for crosstalk among different signalling systems. Further,
the results demonstrate the importance of proteinases as targets for the treatment
or prevention of diseases which are associated with pathological growth-factor receptor
overexpression.
[0004] The present invention is defined by the appended set of claims.
[0005] In a first aspect the invention relates to the use of modulators of G-protein mediated
signal transduction for the manufacture of an agent which modulates growth-factor
receptor activation as defined in claim 1. The activation of the growth-factor receptor
is mediated by its extracellular domain and via an extracellular signal pathway. Thus
the modulator may act on cells which are heterologous to the growth-factor receptor
carrying target cells. The growth-factor receptor activation preferably occurs by
tyrosine phosphorylation, by which an intracellular signal cascade is mediated. Examples
of suitable growth-factor receptors are EGFR, and other members of the EGFR family
such as HER-2, HER-3 or HER-4, but also other growth-factor receptors such as TNF
receptor 1, TNF receptor 2, CD 30 and IL-6 receptor.
[0006] The modulator of the G-protein mediated signal transduction acts on a growth-factor
precursor which is a key element of the signal transduction pathway. For comparison
modulators are described acting or a G-protein, a G-protein coupled receptor, a proteinase.
[0007] The substrate which is subject to cleavage by the protease is proHB-EGF which is
cleaved to HB-EGF and the growth-factor receptor is EGFR. Reference is made to further
examples of growth-factor ligands which are cleaved from precursors are other members
of the EGF family such as TGFα, amphiregulin, epiregulin, EGF, betacellulin, members
of the heregulin/NDF family including isoforms thereof and TNFα.
[0008] The proteinase which is described for reference and which is modulated is usually
a membrane-associated proteinase, preferably a metalloproteinase such a zinc-dependent
proteinase. Examples of these proteinases are members of the ADAM family. The modulation
of proteinase activity may comprise a stimulation or inhibition. The proteinase activity
may be inhibited which in turn results in an inhibition of growth-factor receptor
activation.
[0009] The modulation of proteinase activity may be effected by adding an acitvator or inhibitor
of proteinase activity to the system which in a particulary preferred embodiment directly
modulates the proteinase activity. An example for such a modulator for proteinase
activity is the proteinase inhibitor batimastat. Further examples are marimastat (British
Biotech), TAPI (Immunex) and TIMP-1, -2, -3 or -4, particularly TIMP-3
31. An example according to the invention is CRM197, a catalytically inactive form of
the diphtheria toxin, which specifically binds to proHB-EGF and which is capable of
blocking the processing of proHB-EGF by metalloproteinases.
[0010] The modulation of G-protein modulated signal transduction has great significance
for diagnostic and clinical applications. For example, the modulation of G-protein
mediated signal transduction is a target for the prevention or treatment of disorders
associated with or accompanied by a disturbed e.g. pathologically enhanced growth-factor
receptor acitvation. Described are methods for preventing or treating, among other
diseases, hyperproliferative diseases such as colon, kidney, liver, bladder, pancreatic,
prostate, gastric, breast, lung, thyroid, pituitary, adrenal and ovarian tumors or
glioblastomas, as well as thyroid hyperplasia, retinitis pigmentosa, precocious puberty,
acromegaly and asthma. More particulary, the growth of human prostate cancer cells
may be inhibited by treatment with proteinase inhibitors such as batimastat (BB-94).
In further investigations it was found that proteinase inhibitors are effective against
human gastric, ovarian, kidney, liver, colon, breast, pancreas, lung and bladder cancer
cells and human glioblastoma cells.
[0011] Further described is a method for modulating growth-factor activation comprising
contacting a cell or an organism which contains a growth-factor receptor capable of
being activated with a modulator of G-protein mediated signal transduction. The contacting
step may occur in vitro, e.g. in a cell culture or in vivo, e.g. in a subject in the
need of medical treatment, such as a human. The active agent is added in an amount
sufficient to modulate growth-factor receptor activation, particularly in an amount
sufficient to inhibit growth-factor receptor activation at least partially.
[0012] Preferably the active agent is administered as a pharmaceutically acceptable composition,
which may contain suitable diluents, carriers and auxiliary agents. The composition
may also contain further pharmaceutically active agents e.g. cytotoxic agents for
the treatment of cancer.
[0013] Pharmaceutical compositions suitable for use in the present invention include compositions
wherein the active ingredients are contained in an effective amount to achieve its
intended purpose. A therapeutically effective dose refers to that amount of the compound
that results in amelioration of symptoms or a prolongation of survival in a patient.
Toxicity and therapeutic efficacy of such compounds can be determined by standard
pharmaceutical procedures in cell cultures or experimental animals, e.g. for determining
the LD50 (the dose lethal to 50% of the population) and the ED50 (the dose therapeutically
effective in 50% of the population). For any compound used in the method of the invention,
the therapeutically effective dose can be estimated initially from cell culture assays.
For example, a dose can be formulated in animal models to achieve a circulating concentration
range that includes the IC50 as determined in cell culture (i.e. the concentration
of the test compound which achieves a half-maximal inhibition of the growth-factor
receptor activity). Such information can be used to more accurately determine useful
doses in humans. The dose ratio between toxic and therapeutic effects is the therapeutic
index and it can be expressed as the ratio between LD50 and ED50. Compounds which
exhibit high therapeutic indices are preferred. The exact formulation, route of administration
and dosage can be chosen by the individual physician in view of the patient's condition
(see e.g. Fingl et al., 1975, in "The Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics", Ch.
1, p. 1).
Dosage amount and interval may be adjusted individually to provide plasma levels of
the active moiety which are sufficient to maintain the receptor modulating effects,
or minimal effective concentration (MEC). The MEC will vary for each compound but
can be estimated from in vitro data, e.g. the concentration necessary to achieve a
50-90% inhibition of the receptor using the assays described herein. Compounds should
be administered using a regimen which maintains plasma levels above the MEC for 10-90%
of the time, preferably between 30-90% and most preferably between 50-90%. Dosages
necessary to achieve the MEC will depend on individual characteristics and route of
administration. In cases of local administration or selective uptake, the effective
local concentration of the drug may not be related to plasma concentration.
[0014] The actual amount of composition administered will, of course, be dependent on the
subject being treated, on the subject's weight, the severity of the affliction, the
manner of administration and the judgement of the prescribing physician.
[0015] Suitable routes of administration may, for example, include oral, rectal, transmucosal,
or intestinal administration; parenteral delivery, including intramuscular, subcutaneous,
intramedullary injections, as well as intrathecal, direct intraventricular, intravenous,
intraperitoneal, intranasal, or intraocular injections.
[0016] Alternatively, one may administer the compound in a local rather than a systematic
manner, for example, via injection of the compound directly into a solid tumor, often
in a depot or sustained release formulation. Furthermore, one may administer the drug
in a targeted drug delivery system, for example in a liposome coated with a tumor-specific
antibody. The liposomes will be targeted to and taken up selectively by the tumor.
[0017] Also described is a method for identifying and providing modulators of G-protein
mediated signal transduction comprising contacting a cell which contains a growth-factor
receptor capable of being activated with a test compound suspected to be a modulator
of G-protein mediated signal transduction and determining the degree of growth-factor
receptor activation. This method is suitable as a high-throughput screening procedure
for identifying novel compounds or classes of compounds which are capable of modulating
G-protein signal transduction.
[0018] Cell lines expressing G-protein coupled receptors and/or metalloproteinases may be
used to screen for and identify compounds that inhibit the activity of growth-factor
receptors.
[0019] The ability of test compounds to inhibit the activity of growth-factor receptors
extracellulary activated by G-protein coupled receptor mediated signalling pathways
can be determined as described in the examples.
[0020] Further, the present invention is described in detail by the following figures and
examples:
Description of Figures
[0021]
- Figure 1
- GPCR-induced EP-R transactivation redefines endogenous EGFR-mediated signalling to
PDGFR-specific signals. Proteins were immunoblotted with αPY antibody (4G10).
- a)
- Rat-1/EP-R cells were 3 minutes treated with ET-1 (200 nM), thrombin (2U/ml) and EGF
(2ng/ml) or
- b)
- preincubated with tyrphostins as indicated prior to thrombin stimulation and EP-R
was selectively precipitated with mAb 108.1.
- c)
- Different stable Rat-1 cell lines were untreated or
- d)
- 1 h preincubated with EGFR-E Ab ICR-3R (20µg/ml), stimulated for 3 minutes with GPCR
agonists, EGF or PDGF-BB (25 ng/ml) as indicated and SHP-2 was precipitated.
- e)
- Rat-1/EP-R were treated as in b) and SHC was immunoprecipitated.
- Figure 2
- Carbachol-induced intercellular transactivation of the EGF receptor. Stable Rat-1
cell lines either expressing M1R or HERc and control cells were mixed in 1:3 ratio.
In a) after stimulation with carbachol (1mM), HERc was precipitated and immunoblotted
with αPY antibody. b) Co-cultures of Rat-1/M1R and Rat-1/HERc cells were planted in
different densities, preincubated with EGFR-E blocking Ab ICR-3R (20µg/ml) and HERc
was precipitated following carbachol-stimulation. c) High density co-cultures of Rat-1/M1R
and Rat-1/HERc cells were incubated with heparitinase or chlorate and HERc was precipitated
following carbacol- or EGF- stimulation.
- Figure 3
- GPCR-induced EGFR transactivation and adapter protein tyrosine phosphorylation is
dependent on HB-EGF function. a), c), d) COS-7 and b) HEK 293 cells, transfected with
the M1R or ET-R, respectively, untreated or CRM 197 preincubated, were stimulated
for 3 minutes with the GPCR agonists LPA (10 µM) or Carbachol (1 mM), EGF (2ng/ml)
or 1 µM TPA (5 min) as indicated. Subsequently EGFR (a,b), SHC (c) or Gab 1 (d) was
immunoprecipitated and proteins were immunoblotted with αPY antibody (4G10).
- Figure 4
- GPCR-induced proteolytic processing of proHB-EGF and EGFR transactivation are critically
dependent on metalloproteinase function.
- a)
- COS-7 cells were co-transfected with either M1R or BombR (0.5 µg each) and VSV-proHB-EGF
(0.7 µg) and stimulated with carbachol (1 mM), bombesin (200 nM), TPA (1 µM) or EGF
(2 ng/ml). ProHB-EGF was analysed with αHB-EGF Ab (upper part), cleaved VSV-HB-EGF
was monitored by anti VSV immunoblotting (lower part).
- b)
- COS-7 cells transfected as in a) were preincubated with batimastat (5 µM, 30 min),
stimulated as indicated and anti- VSV immunoprecipitates were subjected to αHB-EGF
immunoblotting.
- c)
- Flow cytometric analyses of proHB-EGF in COS-7 cells treated for 10 minutes with LPA,
TPA, EGF or batimastat preincubation following LPA stimulation.
- d,e)
- COS-7 cells, transfected with the M1R, untreated or BB-94 preincubated, were stimulated
as in Fig. 3a) and EGFR (d) or SHC (e) were immunoprecipitated. Proteins were immunoblotted
with αPY antibody (4G10).
- f)
- PC-3 cells were serum-starved for 36 hours, preincubated with batimastat and stimulated
for 3 minutes with bombesin, TPA or EGF (7ng/ml) as indicated. EGFR was immunoprecipitated
and immunoblotted with αPY antibody.
- g)
- Unstarved PC-3 cells were treated for indicated times with DMSO or batimastat and
EGFR tyrosine phosphorylation was monitored with αPY immunoblot.
Examples
Example 1
1. Methods
Cloning and plasmids
[0022] The following plasmids have been described: pcDNA1-BombR and pcDNA3-M1R
1. For stable expression of the M1R in Rat-1 cells the receptor was subcloned into
pLXSN. pro-HB-EGF and the Endothelin receptor were amplified by PCR from a MCF-7 or
Rat-1 cDNA library and subcloned into pcDNA3-VSV or pcDNA3, respectively.
Cells and transfections
[0023] Rat-1 cells and COS-7 cells were grown and infected or transfected, respectively,
as described
1,2. Rat-1HERc cells have been described elsewhere
1. HEK 293 cells were grown in DMEM containing 10% fetal calf serum (FCS) and transfections
were carried out using the Ca-phosphate method. CRM197 (10 µg/ml, Sigma) or batimastat
(BB-94), (5 µM, British Biotech) were added 20 minutes before the respective growth-
factor. Tyrphostin AG 1478 (250 nM, Calbiochem) and AG1295 (1 µM, Calbiochem) were
added 15 minutes before stimulation.
Immunoprecipitation and Western blotting
[0024] The antibodies against human EGFR (108.1), SHP-2, Shc and Gab1 have been characterized
1,12,19,2. Western blotting against the EP-R chimera was performed using rabbit polyclonal
α-hPDGFRß antibody (Upstate Biotechnology). Cells were lysed and proteins were subsequently
immunoprecipitated as described
1. To precipitate the VSV-tagged HB-EGF a monoclonal VSV antibody (P5D4, Boehringer)
in combination with Protein G-Sepharose was used, HB-EGF was detected with antibody
C-18 (Santa-Cruz). Due to the small size of pro-HB-EGF and the processed form of HB-EGF
we used the Tricine SDS-PAGE system established by Schlägger as described
30.
Flow cytometry analysis
[0025] COS-7 cells were seeded in 6 cm-dishes; 20h later cells were washed and cultured
for a further 24h in serum-free medium until treatment with growth factors as indicated.
After collection cells were incubated with goat αHB-EGF antibody (R&D Systems) for
30 minutes on ice. After washing with PBS, cells were incubated with FITC-conjugated
rabbit anti-goat antibody (Sigma) for 20 minutes on ice. Cells were analysed with
FACSCalibur (Becton Dickinson).
2. Results
[0026] Epidermal growth-factor receptor (EGFR) transactivation was identified as a critical
element in mitogenic signalling
1,5,6 induced by G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCR), regulation of chloride channels
7, as well as modulation of potassium channel activity
8. Since the process was found to be very rapid
1,7,9, and GPCR-induced release of EGFR ligands into the cell culture medium could not
be detested EGFR transactivation has been generally assumed to be exclusively mediated
via intracellular signals
3,4.
[0027] Surprisingly, however, even though PDGF receptors are not transactivated upon treatment
of Rat-1 cells with GPCR ligands
2, this was the case for a chimera EP-R consisting of an EGFR extracellular and the
platelet-derived growth-factor receptor (PDGFR) transmembrane and cytoplasmic signalling
domain
10 (Fig. 1a). This receptor chimera immunoprecipitates with monoclonal antibody 108.1
which recognizes the extracellular portion of human but not rat EGFR. Treatment of
Rat-1/EP-R cells with the PDGFR inhibitor AG1295
11, but not with the EGFR kinase antagonist AG1478
1, blocked thrombin-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of the chimeric receptor (Fig.
1 b), which clearly demonstrated a critical function of the EGFR extracellular domain
for GPCR-mediated transactivation. As shown in Fig. 1c, this EP-R transactivation
results in a PDGF-characteristic downstream signal, since the SH2 domain-containing
phosphatase 2 (SHP-2), a preferred mediator of PDGFR signalling
12, was tyrosine phosphorylated upon endothelin (ET-1) and thrombin stimulation of Rat-1/EP-R
cells, while exposure to the same ligands did not induce SHP-2 tyrosine phosphoryation
in Rat-1 cells overexpressing the PDGFR or control cells. Pretreatment of Rat-1/EP-R
cells with monoclonal antibody ICR-3R
13 that blocks ligand binding to the human EGFR resulted in complete inhibition of ET-1
and EGF-induced SHP-2 tyrosine phosphorylation, whereas the PDGF-mediated response
was not affected (Fig. 1d), confirming that GPCR-induced transactivation of the EP-R
chimera depends on the extracellular EGFR domain. In contrast to the results obtained
for SHP-2 (Fig. 1c), tyrosine phosphorylation of the adaptor protein SHC following
thrombin stimulation was completely blocked by pretreatment of Rat-1 /EP-R cells with
AG 1478, but remained unaffected by preincubation with the PDGFR antagonist AG1295
(Fig. 1e). This confirms that thrombin transactivates endogenuos rat EGFR in Rat-1/EP-R
cells resulting in SHC tyrosine phosphorylation, whereas activation of the EP-R chimera
redefines thrombin stimulation to generate a PDGFR-characteristic SHP-2 signal.
[0028] To address the question whether the extracellular signal which activates the EP-R
chimera acts via an autocrine or paracrine mode, we performed a co-culture experiment
with Rat-1 cells either stably overexpressing the M1 muscarinic acetylcholine receptor
(M1R) or the human EGFR (HERc) at a ratio of one to one. Stimulation of the Rat-1
/M 1 R + Rat-1 /HERc co-culture with the M 1 R agonist carbachol prior to immunoprecipitation
with human EGFR-specific antibody 108.1, rapidly induced tyrosine phosphorylation
of HERc (Fig. 2a). Since neither of the control cells responded to carbachol, this
result clearly demonstrated the possibility of transactivation between two cells.
To investigate the influence of cell density on this paracrine process, HERc was immunoprecipitated
from subconfluent versus confluent co-cultures of Rat-1/M1R and Rat-1 /HERc cells
following stimulation with carbachol. As shown in Fig. 2b and 2c, EGFR tyrosine phosphorylation
in response to M1R agonist only occurred in confluent co-cultures and was completely
inhibited by preincubation with ICR-3R antibody, heparitinase or chlorate. This further
demonstrated the requirement of the EGFR ligand binding function for intercellular
signal transmission and the necessity of close cell-cell contact. Together, these
results lead us to conclude that EGF-like ligands, synthesized as transmembrane precursors
and converted to the mature form by proteolytic cleavage
14, may be involved in GPCR-mediated transactivation. The discrepancy between previous
results obtained from medium-transfer experiments
5,8 in which EGF-like ligands could not be detected upon GPCR activation and our finding
of density-dependent intercellular crosstalk might be due to a scenario in which upon
proteolytic processing EGF-like ligands remain with the heparin sulfate proteoglycan
matrix prior to interaction with their high-affinity receptors as shown for fibroblast
growth-factors
15.
[0029] Ectodomain shedding has been shown to be induced by stimuli such as activators of
heterotrimeric G-proteins, AIF
4- and GTPγS
16, as well as the PKC activator tetradecanoyl-phorbol-13-acetate (TPA) and the Ca
2+-ionophore ionomycin
17.18. The latter, which induces HB-EGF release in prostate epithelial cells
18, has recently been shown to be a potent activator of EGFR transactivation in PC12
cells
19, and TPA has been reported to induce EGFR tyrosine phosphorylation in HEK 293 cells
8. HB-EGF, a member of the EGF family, has the ability to bind to cell surface heparan
sulfate proteoglycans
20, which prevents the immediate releae of the growth-factor and increases the local
growth factor concentration in the cellular microenvironment. Based on these properties
the proHB-EGF precursor matched our proposed requirement for GPCR-induced EGFR transactivation.
Besides its function as a growth-factor precursor, proHB-EGF serves as a high-affinity
receptor for diphteria toxin (DT)
21. CRM197, a non toxic mutant of DT, was shown to inhibit strongly and specifically
the mitogenic activity of HB-EGF
22. Therefore, we tested the influence of CRM197 on GPCR-mediated EGFR transactivation.
We found that CRM 197 pretreatment completely inhibits tyrosine phosphorylation of
the EGFR induced by the GPCR agonists lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) or carbachol as
well as TPA in COS-7 cells (Fig. 3a). Inhibition was also observed for ET-1 or TPA-stimulated
HEK 293 cells transiently transfected with the endothelin receptor (Fig. 3b). In contrast,
EGF-induced receptor tyrosine phosphorylation was unaltered demonstrating CRM197 specificity.
Furthermore, complete abrogation of LPA- and carbachol-induced receptor tyrosine phosphorylation
suggested that HB-EGF is the only growth-factor mediating EGFR transactivation in
the cell lines presented here.
[0030] Tyrosine phosphorylation of the adaptor protein SHC is considered to be a critical
step in the coupling of GPCR activation to Ras-dependent signalling pathways
23. In order to investigate the role of HB-EGF in this process, we examined the effect
of the diphteria toxin mutant CRM197 on GPCR ligand and TPA-mediated SHC tyrosine
phosphorylation. As shown in Fig. 3c, in COS-7 cells, LPA-, carbachol-and TPA-induced
SHC tyrosine phosphorylation was dramatically reduced by CRM197 pretreatment, while
the EGF-mediated response was not affected. The same inhibitory effect of CRM197 was
observed in HEK 293 cells (data not shown). Similarly, in COS-7 cells, tyrosine phosphorylation
of the multidocking protein Gab1 in response to LPA or thrombin was not detected in
the presence of CRM197 (Fig. 3d) confirming its signalling position downstream of
the EGFR
2.
[0031] Next, in order to examine whether proHB-EGF is proteilytically processed upon stimulation
of GPCRs, we transfected plasmids containing VSV-tagged proHB-EGF in COS-7 cells together
with the M1R or the bombesin receptor (BombR) and stimulated with respective ligands
for different times. TPA, a potent inducer of proHB-EGF processing, or EGF were added
as positive and negative controls, respectively. Figure 4a shows that as previously
described proHB-EGF is expressed in form of heterogenous translation products of 20
to 30 KDa
17, which can be detected with antibodies against the C-terminus of the precursor (upper
panel) or the VSV-tag (lower panel). Stimulation with carbachol or bombesin led to
a rapid breakdown of the membrane-anchored growth-factor precursor and proteolytic
cleavage was concommitant with the appearance of the 9 KDa VSV-tagged HB-EGF fragment
containing the transmembrane anchor. Interestingly, under these conditions the GPCR
signal induced proteolytic proHB-EGF proccessing as fast and potently as TPA. As for
TPA
17, GPCR-induced conversion of proHB-EGF is an extremely rapid process that generates
mature HB-EGF. In contrast to GPCR-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of endogenous
EGFR which is fast and transient
1,7,9, overexpression of the protease substrate VSV-proHB-EGF led to a rapid but more sustained
ectodomain cleavage of proHB-EGF.
[0032] Since zinc-dependent metalloproteinases have been implicated in pro-HB-EGF shedding
by TPA
24, we analysed carbachol-induced processing in the presence of batimastat (BB-94)
25, a protease inhibitor which has recently been shown to block proteolytic maturation
of human amphiregulin
26. As shown in Fig. 4b, BB-94 treatment significantly reduced HB-EGF processing in
response to carbachol supporting our conclusion that metalloproteinases are critical
elements in GPCR-induced HB-EGF generation and EGFR activation. In contrast thereto,
PGL-hydroxamate, an MMP-specific inhibitor has no effect on LPA- or carbachol-induced
transactivation (not shown).
[0033] To confirm GPCR-induced proHB-EGF processing, we used an ectodomain-specific antibody
and flow cytometry upon treatment of non-transfected COS-7 cells with LPA, TPA or
EGF. Within 10 minutes after addition of LPA and TPA, the content of cell surface
proHB-EGF was reduced while EGF stimulation showed no effect (Fig. 4c). In contrast
to the experiments with transfected cells shown in Fig. 4a and b, activation of endogenous
LPA receptors was not as potent as TPA to induce proteolytic cleavage of proHB-EGF.
Nonetheless, consistent with Fig. 4b, the modest LPA-induced effect was completely
inhibited by batimastat.
[0034] Our results demonstrate that metalloproteinase-dependent cleavage of proHB-EGF is
rapidly induced upon activation of GPCRs and consequently suggest a critical and general
role of this process in EGFR transactivation. We therefore investigated the effect
of the metalloproteinase inhibitor batimastat in GPCR- as well as TPA-induced EGFR
transactivation. In COS-7 cells, BB-94 pretreatment completely abrogated LPA- and
carbachol-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of the EGFR, as well as TPA-mediated receptor
activation (Fig. 4d). Since TPA- but not GPCR-mediated EGFR tyrosine phosphorylation
is sensitive to PKC inhibition in COS-7 cells (data not shown), it appears that at
least two distinct metalloproteinase-dependent transactivation pathways exist. Analogous
results were obtained for ET-1-induced transactivation in HEK 293 cells and bradykinin-stimulated
EGFR tyrosine phosphorylation in PC12 cells (data not shown). Finally, the general
implication of proteolytic processing in EGFR transactivation and downstream signal
transmission is demonstrated by the complete abrogation of GPCR- and TPA-induced SHC
tyrosine phosphorylation by batimastat (Fig. 4e).
[0035] Because of the well established role of EGFR family members in the pathogenesis of
a variety of cancers and the physiological abundance of GPCR ligands such as LPA,
we addressed the pathophysiological significance of transactivation with the human
prostate cancer cell line PC-3 which has been reported to utilize EGFR-dependent pathways
for growth promotion and is also responsive to the GPCR ligand bombesin
27,28. Figure 4f shows that in PC-3 cells that were starved for 36 hours, bombesin, TPA
and EGF induce tyrosine phosphorylation of the EGFR which is completely blocked by
batimastat-treatment. Moreover, even high constitutive phosphotyrosine content of
the EGFR in unstarved PC-3 cells is reduced by long-term treatment with BB-94 (Fig.
4g). All in all, our results allow the conclusion that metalloproteinase-mediated
precursor cleavage represents a direct link between BombR activation, constitutive
tyrosine phosphorylation of the EGFR and proliferation of human prostate cancer cells.
Recently, ADAM9, a member of the metalloproteinase-disintagrin family has been reported
to process proHB-EGF upon TPA treatment of Vero-H cells
24. We were unable, however, to block EGFR transactivation with dominant-negative ADAM9
mutants in COS-7 and HEK 293 cells (data not shown) leaving the identity of the precursor
processing protease unresolved.
[0036] Our findings identify the ubiquitously expressed HB-EGF precursor and a metalloproteinase
activity as critical pathway elements between GPCR signals and activation of the EGFR
and extend our understanding of the mechanisms that underly the multiple biological
processes known to be regulated by heterotrimeric G-proteins. Based on our current
state of understanding, GPCR-induced EGFR signal transactivation represents a new
paradigm because it entails three different transmembrane signal transmission events:
First, a ligand activates heterotrimeric G-proteins by interaction with a GPCR which
results in an intracellular signal that induces the extracellular activity of a transmembrane
metalloproteinase. This then results in extracellular processing of a transmembrane
growth-factor precursor and release of the mature factor which, directly or via the
proteoglycan matrix, interacts with the ectodomain of the EGFR leading to intracellular
autophosphorylation and signal generation. Our previous findings indicate that this
pathway may be utilized by a variety of GPCRs in diverse cell types and that the preferred
transactivation target is the EGFR and its relatives
1-4. The demonstration of the pathophysiological relevance of this novel mechanism in
prostrate cancer cells leads us to propose that EGFR transactivation via G-protein-mediated
proteolytic growth precursor processing represents a general mechanism with broad
significance. Moreover, since a great variety of bioactive polypeptides as diverse
as TNF-α, FAS-ligand or L-selectin are processing products of transmembrane precursors
29 that have been connected to pathophysiological disorders, our findings shed new light
on the importance of membrane-associated proteinases as targets for disease intervention
strategies.
Example 2 (for comparison)
[0037] EGFR-transactivation and the effect of the proteinase inhibitor BB-94 were tested
on a plurality of human cancer cells. The summary of the results is as follows:
| Cancer cell line from: |
Tested |
Transactivation |
BB94 effect |
| gastric |
1 |
1 |
- |
| prostate |
3 |
1 |
1 |
| ovary |
5 |
3 |
5 |
| kidney |
7 |
5 |
3 |
| liver |
2 |
1 |
1 |
| colon |
4 |
2 |
2 |
| breast |
8 |
3 |
2 |
| pancreas |
8 |
5 |
8 |
| bladder |
6 |
4 |
2 |
| glioblastoma |
5 |
3 |
3 |
| lung (NSCLC) |
7 |
4 |
4 |
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