Modeling Pharmacological Inhibition of Mast Cell Degranulation as a Therapy for Insulinoma

Myc, a pleiotropic transcription factor that is deregulated and/or overexpressed in most human cancers, instructs multiple extracellular programs that are required to sustain the complex microenvironment needed for tumor maintenance, including remodeling of tumor stroma, angiogenesis, and inflammati...

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Published inNeoplasia (New York, N.Y.) Vol. 13; no. 11; pp. 1093,IN43 - 1100,IN43
Main Authors Soucek, Laura, Buggy, Joseph J., Kortlever, Roderik, Adimoolam, Shanthi, Monclús, Helena Allende, Allende, Maria Teresa Salcedo, Swigart, Lamorna Brown, Evan, Gerard I.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Inc 01.11.2011
Neoplasia Press Inc
Elsevier
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Summary:Myc, a pleiotropic transcription factor that is deregulated and/or overexpressed in most human cancers, instructs multiple extracellular programs that are required to sustain the complex microenvironment needed for tumor maintenance, including remodeling of tumor stroma, angiogenesis, and inflammation. We previously showed in a model of pancreatic β-cell tumorigenesis that acute Myc activation in vivo triggers rapid recruitment of mast cells to the tumor site and that this is absolutely required for angiogenesis and macroscopic tumor expansion. More-over, systemic inhibition of mast cell degranulation with sodium cromoglycate induced death of tumor and endothelial cells in established tumors. Hence, mast cells are required both to establish and to maintain the tumors. Whereas this intimates that selective inhibition of mast cell function could be therapeutically efficacious, cromoglycate is not a practical drug for systemic delivery in humans, and no other systemic inhibitor of mast cell degranulation has hitherto been available. PCI-32765 is a novel inhibitor of Bruton tyrosine kinase (Btk) that blocks mast cell degranulation and is currently in clinical trial as a therapy for B-cell non–Hodgkin lymphoma. Here, we show that systemic treatment of insulinoma-bearing mice with PCI-32765 efficiently inhibits Btk, blocks mast cell degranulation, and triggers collapse of tumor vasculature and tumor regression. These data reinforce the notion that mast cell function is required for maintenance of certain tumor types and indicate that the Btk inhibitor PCI-32765 may be useful in treating such diseases.
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Present address: Sanger Building, Department of Biochemistry, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
ISSN:1476-5586
1522-8002
1476-5586
1522-8002
DOI:10.1593/neo.11980