1alpha,25-Dihydroxyvitamin D(3) antiproliferative actions involve vitamin D receptor-mediated activation of MAPK pathways and AP-1/p21(waf1) upregulation in human osteosarcoma

Print
Published on Thursday, 22 June 2017

Abstract

The molecular mechanisms underlying antiproliferative actions of the steroid 1alpha,25-dihydroxy vitamin D(3) (1,25D) in human osteosarcoma cells are known only partially.

To better understand the signaling involved in 1,25D anti-tumorigenic properties in bone, we stably silenced vitamin D receptor (VDR) expression in the human osteosarcoma SaOS-2 cell line.

We found that 1,25D treatment reduced cell proliferation by approximately 25% after 3 days only in SaOS-2 cells expressing native levels of VDR protein, and involved activation of MAPK/AP-1/p21(waf1) pathways. Both sustained (3 days) and transient (15min) 1,25D treatment activated JNK and ERK1/2 MAPK signaling in a nongenomic VDR-dependent manner. However, only sustained exposure to hormone led to upregulation of p21 and subsequent genomic control of the cell cycle.

Specific blockade of MEK1/MEK2 cascade upstream from ERK1/2 abrogated 1,25D activation of AP-1 and p21, and subsequent antiproliferative effects, even in the presence of a nuclear VDR.

We conclude that 1,25D-induced inhibition of human osteosarcoma cell proliferation occurs via sustained activation of JNK and MEK1/MEK2 pathways downstream of nongenomic VDR signaling that leads to upregulation of a c-Jun/c-Fos (AP-1) complex, which in turn modulates p21(waf1) gene expression.

Our results demonstrate a cross-talk between 1,25D/VDR nongenomic and genomic signaling at the level of MAP kinase activation that leads to reduction of cell proliferation in human osteosarcoma cells.

 

 

About this publication.

 

See also:

- Vitamin D (analogues and/or derivatives) and cancer;

- Congenital fibrosarcoma in complete remission with Somatostatin, Retinoids, Vitamin D3, Vitamin E, Vitamin C, Melatonin, Calcium, Chondroitin sulfate associated with low doses of Cyclophosphamide in a 14-year Follow Up;

- The Di Bella Method (DBM) in the treatment of prostate cancer: a preliminary retrospective study of 16 patients and a review of the literature;

- Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia: Long-Lasting Remission with Combination of Cyclophosphamide, Somatostatin, Bromocriptine, Retinoids, Melatonin, and ACTH;

- Evaluation of the safety and efficacy of the first-line treatment with somatostatin combined with melatonisn, retinoids, vitamin D3, and low doses of cyclophosphamide in 20 cases of breast cancer: a preliminary report;

- The Di Bella Method (DBM) improved survival, objective response and performance status in a retrospective observational clinical study on 122 cases of breast cancer;

- Complete objective response to biological therapy of plurifocal breast carcinoma.