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Joseph C. Cheng Laboratory of Dr. James S. Norris Department of Microbiology & Immunology Medical University of South Carolina October 31, 2007 Modulation of Sphingolipid Metabolism Enhances Apoptin’s Cytotoxicity in Prostate Cancer

Joseph C. Cheng Laboratory of Dr. James S. Norris Department of Microbiology & Immunology Medical University of South Carolina October 31, 2007 Modulation

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Page 1: Joseph C. Cheng Laboratory of Dr. James S. Norris Department of Microbiology & Immunology Medical University of South Carolina October 31, 2007 Modulation

Joseph C. ChengLaboratory of Dr. James S. Norris

Department of Microbiology & ImmunologyMedical University of South Carolina

October 31, 2007

Modulation of Sphingolipid Metabolism Enhances Apoptin’s Cytotoxicity in Prostate

Cancer

Page 2: Joseph C. Cheng Laboratory of Dr. James S. Norris Department of Microbiology & Immunology Medical University of South Carolina October 31, 2007 Modulation

VP1 VP3VP2

Chicken Anemia Virus (CAV):

Apoptosis induction

VP1 No

VP2 Weak

VP3 Strong ApoptinApoptin

Noteborn, MH et al. (1994) JVI 68:346-351.

Page 3: Joseph C. Cheng Laboratory of Dr. James S. Norris Department of Microbiology & Immunology Medical University of South Carolina October 31, 2007 Modulation

Nur77Nur77

ApoptinApoptin

How Apoptin Works in Cells

Crm1Crm1

ShieldingAggregationUbquitinationDegradation

PP

ApoptinApoptin

Nur77Nur77

ApoptinApoptin

PP

MitochondriaBcl-2Bcl-2

Nur77Nur77

Nur77Nur77

Nur77Nur77

Nur77Nur77

Nur77Nur77 Cytochrome C

Caspase 9

Caspase 3

Apoptosis

DEDAF

APC-1

Hippi

Page 4: Joseph C. Cheng Laboratory of Dr. James S. Norris Department of Microbiology & Immunology Medical University of South Carolina October 31, 2007 Modulation

Prostate Cancer

• 217,000 new cases per year in U.S., (670,000 worldwide)

• 27,000 deaths per year in U.S.• 2nd leading cause of cancer

death in American men.• Improved methodologies of

diagnosis and treatment have led to higher cure rate.

• Cancer-related deaths are due to advanced disease by aggressive and resistant cancers.

Page 5: Joseph C. Cheng Laboratory of Dr. James S. Norris Department of Microbiology & Immunology Medical University of South Carolina October 31, 2007 Modulation

AdGFPApoptinTET Vector

5' 3'

E1

E3 E4

SV40poly A

tTA

ITR

+ - tetracyclineor doxycycline

TETR +VP16

GFPApoptin TRE ITR

VP16

rTETR

SV40poly A

VP16

rTETR

VP16

rTETR

CMVPromoter

Page 6: Joseph C. Cheng Laboratory of Dr. James S. Norris Department of Microbiology & Immunology Medical University of South Carolina October 31, 2007 Modulation

PC

-3

DU

145

LN

CaP

Bcl-2

Bax

FLIPL

FLIPS

DU

145

PC

-3

LN

CaP

Survivin

cIAP-1

XIAP

Bcl-xL

tubulin

Endogenous Gene Expression in Prostate Cancer Cells

DU145 (p53mt/mt), LNCaP (p53wt/wt), and PC-3 (p53null)

Liu et al. (2006) Mol Ther. 14:637-46.

Page 7: Joseph C. Cheng Laboratory of Dr. James S. Norris Department of Microbiology & Immunology Medical University of South Carolina October 31, 2007 Modulation

Caspase 3

32KD

17KD

12KD

Ad-GFP Ad-Apop Ad-GFP Ad-Apop Ad-GFP Ad-Apop

DU145 LNcap PC3

Bak

Bax

P-p53

Actin

Apoptin Causes Caspase 3 Dependent Apoptosis in Prostate Cancer Cells

Liu et al. (2006) Mol Ther. 14:637-46.

Page 8: Joseph C. Cheng Laboratory of Dr. James S. Norris Department of Microbiology & Immunology Medical University of South Carolina October 31, 2007 Modulation

Prostate Cancer Cell Lines Show Similar Sensitivity to Ad-Apoptin

Liu et al. (2006) Mol Ther. 14:637-46.

Page 9: Joseph C. Cheng Laboratory of Dr. James S. Norris Department of Microbiology & Immunology Medical University of South Carolina October 31, 2007 Modulation

CeramideCeramidases

Sphingosine

SphingosineKinase

S1P

Growth inhibition (cell cycle arrest)Apoptosis

Differentiation

Modulation of telomerase activity (telomere length)Senescence

(Pro-apoptotic phenotype)(Pro-apoptotic phenotype)

Cell proliferation

TransformationAngiogenesis

Cell motility (endothelial)

(Anti-apoptotic phenotype)(Anti-apoptotic phenotype)

S1PP

Stress (growth factor withdrawal, hypoxia,

hyperthermia, DNA damage)

Apoptin

Radiation

FasL/AdGFPFasLChemotherapy

Page 10: Joseph C. Cheng Laboratory of Dr. James S. Norris Department of Microbiology & Immunology Medical University of South Carolina October 31, 2007 Modulation

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

180

200

0 10 20 30 40 50 60

Hours post-infection

% C

on

tro

lCeramide

Sphingomyelin

Sphingosine

Apoptin Causes Sphingolipids Changes in DU145 Cells

Liu et al. (2006) Mol Ther. 14:627-36.

Page 11: Joseph C. Cheng Laboratory of Dr. James S. Norris Department of Microbiology & Immunology Medical University of South Carolina October 31, 2007 Modulation

Sphingomyelin De novo Synthesis

Ceramide

SMase

Ceramidases

Sphingosine

SphingosineKinase

S1P

Ceramide Synthase

S1PP

Apoptin

Page 12: Joseph C. Cheng Laboratory of Dr. James S. Norris Department of Microbiology & Immunology Medical University of South Carolina October 31, 2007 Modulation

The importance of sphingomyelin hydrolysis in apoptosis

• Lymphoblasts derived from patients with acid SMase deficiency (NPD), failed to undergo apoptosis in response to irradiation or CD95 ligation.

• Radiation exposure of thymocytes from acid SMase knockout mice did not undergo apoptosis.

• Ceramide generation induced by addition of exogenous acid SMase augmented apoptosis in human leukemic and prostate cancer cells.

Santana, P. et al. (1996) Cell 86:189.De Maria, R. et al. (1998) J. Exp. Med. 187:897.Monney, L. et al. Eur. J. Biochem. 251:295.Condorelli, F. et al. (1999) Br. J. Pharmacol. 127:75.

Page 13: Joseph C. Cheng Laboratory of Dr. James S. Norris Department of Microbiology & Immunology Medical University of South Carolina October 31, 2007 Modulation

RTPCR for Acid Sphingomyelinase (ASMase)/Acid Ceramidase (AC)

Rig/S15

ASMase

Control 6hrs 16hrs 30hrs 48hrs Control 6hrs 16hrs 30hrs 48hrs

Ad-GFP Ad-Apoptin

AC

Page 14: Joseph C. Cheng Laboratory of Dr. James S. Norris Department of Microbiology & Immunology Medical University of South Carolina October 31, 2007 Modulation

Western blot

ASMase

Ad-GFP Ad-GFPApoptin

Acid Ceramidase

Actin

Sphingomyelin

Ceramide

Sphingosine

ASMase

Acid Ceramidase

30 hours post-infection

Liu et al. (2006) Mol Ther. 14:627-36.

Page 15: Joseph C. Cheng Laboratory of Dr. James S. Norris Department of Microbiology & Immunology Medical University of South Carolina October 31, 2007 Modulation

Translocation of Acid SMase by Confocal Microscopy Detection

16 hours post-infection

Ad-GFP

GFP (Green) ASMase (Red) Overlay

Ad-GFPApoptin

Liu et al. (2006) Mol Ther. 14:627-36.

Page 16: Joseph C. Cheng Laboratory of Dr. James S. Norris Department of Microbiology & Immunology Medical University of South Carolina October 31, 2007 Modulation

Ad-Apoptin Increases ASMase Activity

MOI

Liu et al. (2006) Mol Ther. 14:627-36.

Page 17: Joseph C. Cheng Laboratory of Dr. James S. Norris Department of Microbiology & Immunology Medical University of South Carolina October 31, 2007 Modulation

Desipramine Partly Delays Apoptin-induced Cell Death

DU145 Co-treated with Ad-Apoptin and Desipramine (1uM and 2.5 uM)

20 30 40 50 60

MOI of Ad-Apoptin

Cel

l V

iab

ilit

y (%

)

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

* p<0.01

* p<0.01

Ad-GFPApoptinApoptin+ Desipramine (1 uM)Apoptin+Desipramine (2.5 uM)

Liu et al. (2006) Mol Ther. 14:627-36.

Page 18: Joseph C. Cheng Laboratory of Dr. James S. Norris Department of Microbiology & Immunology Medical University of South Carolina October 31, 2007 Modulation

PKC delta-siRNAScrambled sequence siRNA

Ad-GFP

Ad-GFPApoptin

Page 19: Joseph C. Cheng Laboratory of Dr. James S. Norris Department of Microbiology & Immunology Medical University of South Carolina October 31, 2007 Modulation

Ceramide level in PC3 Cells treated with PKC-siRNA

0.00

0.20

0.40

0.60

0.80

1.00

1.20

1.40

C-18:1-Cer C14-Cer C16-Cer C18-Cer C20-Cer C24-Cer C24:1-Cer

XL-1-Scramble

XL-1-pkc-SiRNA

Page 20: Joseph C. Cheng Laboratory of Dr. James S. Norris Department of Microbiology & Immunology Medical University of South Carolina October 31, 2007 Modulation

Summary• Tumor-selective viral protein Apoptin induces apoptosis in prostate cancer cells.

• There was no obvious correlation between Apoptin-induced cell death and the status of pro- and anti-apoptotic molecules.

• Apoptin-mediated cell death involves modulation of the sphingomyelin-ceramide pathway.

• Apoptin induces acid sphingomyelinase translocation and activation through PKC.

• Inhibition of acid sphingomyelinase reduces the efficacy of apoptin-induced cell death.

Page 21: Joseph C. Cheng Laboratory of Dr. James S. Norris Department of Microbiology & Immunology Medical University of South Carolina October 31, 2007 Modulation

Ceramide

Acid Ceramidase

Sphingosine Sphingosine-1-P

Sphingosine Kinase

Angiogenesis Anti-apoptosis

Ceramide/S1P Pathway

Pro- apoptosis

>60% Gleason grades 5-6 tissues over-express AC.>80% Gleason grades 8-10 tissues over-express AC.

Apoptin

Page 22: Joseph C. Cheng Laboratory of Dr. James S. Norris Department of Microbiology & Immunology Medical University of South Carolina October 31, 2007 Modulation

Over-expression of AC Protect Apoptin’s Killing

Cytotoxicity of Ad-Apoptin in DU145 cells Over-expressing Acid Ceramidase

Cel

l Via

bili

ty

0

20

40

60

80

20 40 60 80 100 150

MOI

DU145-EGFP

DU145-ACEGFP#3

DU145-ACEGFP#7

Mock #3 #7

Liu et al. (2006) Mol Ther. 14:637-46.

Page 23: Joseph C. Cheng Laboratory of Dr. James S. Norris Department of Microbiology & Immunology Medical University of South Carolina October 31, 2007 Modulation

HN

OH

HO NO2

. HCl

LCL204: Acid Ceramidase Inhibitor

LIPIDOMICS CORE

Page 24: Joseph C. Cheng Laboratory of Dr. James S. Norris Department of Microbiology & Immunology Medical University of South Carolina October 31, 2007 Modulation

• AC inhibition by LCL204 results in ceramide accumulation and conversion from an anti-apoptotic phenotype to a pro-apoptotic phenotype.

• LCL204 displays lysomotropic properties by causing rapid lysosomal membane permeabilization (LMP) resulting in translocation of the lysosomal proteases cathepsins B and D into the cytosol.

• Apoptosis induced by LCL204 is dependent on Bak, suggesting that LMP induces a mitochondrial apoptotic pathway.

• LCL204 significantly down-regulates anti-apoptotic genes Flip and Survivin.

Previous Studies:

Holman et al. 2007 Cancer Chemother Pharmacol DOI: 10.1007/s00280-007-0465-0

Page 25: Joseph C. Cheng Laboratory of Dr. James S. Norris Department of Microbiology & Immunology Medical University of South Carolina October 31, 2007 Modulation

Acid Ceramidase Inhibitor LCL204 Enhanced Apoptin’s Effect

DU145 Cells Treated with Ad-GFPApoptin (MOI 20)) and Followed by LCL204 (5 uM)

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

NT LCL 204 Ad-GFPApoptin Ad-GFPApoptin+LCL

Treatments

Cel

l Via

bil

ity

(%)

* #

* # ^

Liu et al. (2006) Mol Ther. 14:637-46.

Page 26: Joseph C. Cheng Laboratory of Dr. James S. Norris Department of Microbiology & Immunology Medical University of South Carolina October 31, 2007 Modulation

Tumors are treated with 5 intraperitoneal injections of LCL204 75 mg/kg (Q 3 days).

Tumors are treated with 4 intratumoral injections of 2 X 109 PFU adenovirus (Q 3 days).

Design of in vivo experiments

Page 27: Joseph C. Cheng Laboratory of Dr. James S. Norris Department of Microbiology & Immunology Medical University of South Carolina October 31, 2007 Modulation

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

800

0 5 10 15 20 25 30

Days

Rel

ativ

e tu

mor

vol

um

e

(% o

f or

igin

al)

Control

LCL-204

Apoptin

Apoptin+LCL

*#

*

Animal Study

Liu et al. (2006) Mol Ther. 14:637-46.

Page 28: Joseph C. Cheng Laboratory of Dr. James S. Norris Department of Microbiology & Immunology Medical University of South Carolina October 31, 2007 Modulation

Days0 20 40 60 80

Su

rviv

al R

ate

(%)

0

20

40

60

80

100

LCL204

Apoptin

Control

Apoptin+LCL

Animal Study

Liu et al. (2006) Mol Ther. 14:637-46.

Page 29: Joseph C. Cheng Laboratory of Dr. James S. Norris Department of Microbiology & Immunology Medical University of South Carolina October 31, 2007 Modulation

Summary

• Apoptin-mediated cell death involves modulation of the sphingomyelin-ceramide pathway.

• Ceramide accumulates in response to Apoptin via increased biosynthesis (ASMase) and retention (AC).

• Pretreatment of prostate cancer cells with AC inhibitor sensitizes tumors to Apoptin, indicating AC is a potential therapeutic target.