Publication | Closed Access
Selective β2‐AR Blockage Suppresses Colorectal Cancer Growth Through Regulation of EGFR‐Akt/ERK1/2 Signaling, G1‐Phase Arrest, and Apoptosis
73
Citations
44
References
2015
Year
Specific Crc CellsCell DeathCancer BiologyTumor BiologySignaling PathwayCancer Cell BiologyRadiation OncologyCell SignalingCancer ResearchMolecular SignalingMedicineβ2-Ar BlockageColorectal CancerPharmacologyCell BiologyEgfr‐akt/erk1/2 SignalingG1‐phase ArrestTumor SuppressorOncologyCancer Growth
The stress-upregulated catecholamines-activated β1- and β2-adrenergic receptors (β1/2-ARs) have been shown to accelerate the progression of cancers such as colorectal cancer (CRC). We investigated the underlying mechanism of the inhibition of β1/2-ARs signaling for the treatment of CRC and elucidated the significance of β2-AR expression in CRC in vitro and in clinical samples. The impacts of β1/2-AR antagonists in CRC in vitro and CRC-xenograft in vivo were examined. We found that repression of β2-AR but not β1-AR signaling selectively suppressed cell viability, induced G1-phase cell cycle arrest, caused both intrinsic and extrinsic pathways-mediated apoptosis of specific CRC cells and inhibited CRC-xenograft growth in vivo. Moreover, the expression of β2-AR was not consistent with the progression of CRC in vitro or in clinical samples. Our data evidence that the expression profiles, signaling, and blockage of β2-AR have a unique pattern in CRC comparing to other cancers. β2-AR antagonism selectively suppresses the growth of CRC accompanying active β2-AR signaling, which potentially carries wild-type KRAS, in vitro and in vivo via the inhibition of β2-AR transactivated EFGR-Akt/ERK1/2 signaling pathway. Thus, β2-AR blockage might be a potential therapeutic strategy for combating the progressions of β2-AR-dependent CRC.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1