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Published in: Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy 8/2020

01-08-2020 | Metastasis | Original Article

NK1R antagonist decreases inflammation and metastasis of breast carcinoma cells metastasized to liver but not to brain; phenotype-dependent therapeutic and toxic consequences

Authors: Esra Nizam, Sadi Köksoy, Nuray Erin

Published in: Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy | Issue 8/2020

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Abstract

Substance P a neuro-immune mediator acts on Neurokinin-1 and -2 receptors (NK1R and NK2R). Inhibitors of NK1R are considered to be safe and effective approaches for cancer treatment since Aprepitant, a non-peptide antagonist of NK1R is widely used for chemotherapy-induced emesis and has cytotoxic and antitumor effects in various models for cancer. On the other hand, our previous findings demonstrated that systemic inhibition of NK1R may decrease cytotoxic anti-tumoral immune response. Hence, actual consequences of inhibition of neurokinin receptors under in vivo conditions in a syngeneic model of carcinoma should be determined. The effects of highly potent and selective non-peptide mouse NK1R and NK2R antagonists RP 67580 and GR 159897, respectively, on metastatic breast carcinoma were evaluated. Specifically, 4T1 breast cancer cells metastasized to brain (denoted as 4TBM) and liver (denoted as 4TLM) were used to induce tumors in Balb-c mice. Changes in tumor growth, metastasis and immune response to cancer cells were determined. We here observed differential effects of NK1R antagonist depended on the subset of metastatic cells. Specifically, inhibition of NK1R markedly increased liver metastasis of tumors formed by 4TBM but not 4TLM cells. On the contrary, NK1R antagonist decreased inflammatory response and liver metastasis in 4TLM-injected mice. 4TLM tumors act more aggressively inducing more inflammatory response compared to 4TBM tumors. Hence, differential effects of NK1R antagonist are at least partly due to extend and type of the inflammatory response evoked by specific subset metastatic cells. These findings demonstrate the necessity for understanding the immunological consequences of tumor-microenvironment interactions.
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Metadata
Title
NK1R antagonist decreases inflammation and metastasis of breast carcinoma cells metastasized to liver but not to brain; phenotype-dependent therapeutic and toxic consequences
Authors
Esra Nizam
Sadi Köksoy
Nuray Erin
Publication date
01-08-2020
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Keyword
Metastasis
Published in
Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy / Issue 8/2020
Print ISSN: 0340-7004
Electronic ISSN: 1432-0851
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00262-020-02574-z

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