Publication | Open Access
Lurbinectedin reduces tumour-associated macrophages and the inflammatory tumour microenvironment in preclinical models
149
Citations
29
References
2017
Year
Lurbinectedin is a novel anticancer agent currently undergoing late‑stage (Phase II/III) clinical evaluation in platinum‑resistant ovarian, BRCA1/2‑mutated breast, and small‑cell lung cancer. The study examined whether lurbinectedin can modulate the inflammatory tumour microenvironment and the viability of myeloid cells in tumour‑bearing mice. Lurbinectedin selectively reduced circulating monocytes, tumour‑associated macrophages, and vessels, induced caspase‑8–dependent apoptosis of monocytes, suppressed inflammatory cytokine production and monocyte adhesion/migration, down‑regulated Rho‑GTPase genes, and thereby remodelled the tumour microenvironment while retaining direct antitumour activity.
Lurbinectedin is a novel anticancer agent currently undergoing late-stage (Phase II /III) clinical evaluation in platinum-resistant ovarian, BRCA1/2-mutated breast and small-cell lung cancer. Lurbinectedin is structurally related to trabectedin and it inhibits active transcription and the DNA repair machinery in tumour cells.In this study we investigated whether lurbinectedin has the ability to modulate the inflammatory microenvironment and the viability of myeloid cells in tumour-bearing mice.Administration of lurbinectedin significantly and selectively decreased the number of circulating monocytes and, in tumour tissues, that of macrophages and vessels. Similar findings were observed when a lurbinectedin-resistant tumour variant was used, indicating a direct effect of lurbinectedin on the tumour microenviroment. In vitro, lurbinectedin induced caspase-8-dependent apoptosis of human purified monocytes, whereas at low doses it significantly inhibited the production of inflammatory/growth factors (CCL2, CXCL8 and VEGF) and dramatically impaired monocyte adhesion and migration ability. These findings were supported by the strong inhibition of genes of the Rho-GTPase family in lurbinectedin-treated monocytes.The results illustrate that lurbinectedin affects at multiple levels the inflammatory microenvironment by acting on the viability and functional activity of mononuclear phagocytes. These peculiar effects, combined with its intrinsic activity against cancer cells, make lurbinectedin a compound of particular interest in oncology.
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