TY - JOUR
T1 - Oxygen-enhanced optoacoustic tomography reveals the effectiveness of targeting heme and oxidative phosphorylation at normalizing tumor vascular oxygenation
AU - Ghosh, Poorva
AU - Guo, Yihang
AU - Ashrafi, Adnin
AU - Chen, Jingyu
AU - Dey, Sanchareeka
AU - Zhong, Shigen
AU - Liu, Jie
AU - Campbell, James
AU - Konduri, Purna Chaitanya
AU - Gerberich, Jeni
AU - Garrossian, Massoud
AU - Mason, Ralph P.
AU - Zhang, Li
AU - Liu, Li
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas grants RP160617 & RP200021 and infrastructure provided by the Southwestern Small Animal Imaging Research Program (SW-SAIRP), supported in part by P30 CA142543 and Shared Instrumentation Grants 1S10 RR024757, S10 OD018094-01A1, and we appreciate the skilled histology of John Shelton (JAR Molecular Pathology Core). R.P. Mason reports grants from NIH and CPRIT.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 American Association for Cancer Research.
PY - 2020/9/1
Y1 - 2020/9/1
N2 - Multispectral optoacoustic tomography (MSOT) is an emerging noninvasive imaging modality that can detect real-time dynamic information about the tumor microenvironment in humans and animals. Oxygen enhanced (OE)-MSOT can monitor tumor vasculature and oxygenation during disease development or therapy. Here, we used MSOT and OE-MSOT to examine in mice the response of human non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) xenografts to a new class of antitumor drugs, heme-targeting agents heme-sequestering peptide 2 (HSP2) and cyclopamine tartrate (CycT). HSP2 inhibits heme uptake, while CycT inhibits heme synthesis in NSCLC cells, where heme is essential for ATP generation via oxidative phosphorylation. HSP2 and CycT can inhibit ATP generation and thereby suppress NSCLC cell tumorigenic functions. MSOT showed that treatment of NSCLC tumors with HSP2 or CycT reduced total hemoglobin, increased oxygen saturation, and enhanced the amplitude of response to oxygen gas breathing challenge. HSP2 and CycT normalized tumor vasculature and improved tumor oxygenation, where levels of several hypoxia markers in NSCLC tumors were reduced by treatment with HSP2 or CycT. Furthermore, treatment with HSP2 or CycT reduced levels of angiogenic factor VEGFA, its receptor VEGFR1, and vascular marker CD34. Together, our data show that heme-targeting drugs HSP2 and CycT elicit multiple tumor-suppressing functions, such as inhibiting angiogenic function, normalizing tumor vasculature, alleviating tumor hypoxia, and inhibiting oxygen consumption and ATP generation.
AB - Multispectral optoacoustic tomography (MSOT) is an emerging noninvasive imaging modality that can detect real-time dynamic information about the tumor microenvironment in humans and animals. Oxygen enhanced (OE)-MSOT can monitor tumor vasculature and oxygenation during disease development or therapy. Here, we used MSOT and OE-MSOT to examine in mice the response of human non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) xenografts to a new class of antitumor drugs, heme-targeting agents heme-sequestering peptide 2 (HSP2) and cyclopamine tartrate (CycT). HSP2 inhibits heme uptake, while CycT inhibits heme synthesis in NSCLC cells, where heme is essential for ATP generation via oxidative phosphorylation. HSP2 and CycT can inhibit ATP generation and thereby suppress NSCLC cell tumorigenic functions. MSOT showed that treatment of NSCLC tumors with HSP2 or CycT reduced total hemoglobin, increased oxygen saturation, and enhanced the amplitude of response to oxygen gas breathing challenge. HSP2 and CycT normalized tumor vasculature and improved tumor oxygenation, where levels of several hypoxia markers in NSCLC tumors were reduced by treatment with HSP2 or CycT. Furthermore, treatment with HSP2 or CycT reduced levels of angiogenic factor VEGFA, its receptor VEGFR1, and vascular marker CD34. Together, our data show that heme-targeting drugs HSP2 and CycT elicit multiple tumor-suppressing functions, such as inhibiting angiogenic function, normalizing tumor vasculature, alleviating tumor hypoxia, and inhibiting oxygen consumption and ATP generation.
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U2 - 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-19-3247
DO - 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-19-3247
M3 - Article
C2 - 32546631
AN - SCOPUS:85096186596
SN - 0008-5472
VL - 80
SP - 3542
EP - 3555
JO - Cancer Research
JF - Cancer Research
IS - 17
ER -