Browsing by Author "Villegas, Jaime"
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Item Evaluation of the chemopreventive potentials of ezetimibeand aspirin in a novel mouse model of gallbladderpreneoplasia(2020) Rosa, Lorena; Lobos-González, Lorena; Munoz Durango, Natalia; Garcıa, Patricia; Bizama, Carolina; Gomez, Natalia; Gonzalez, Ximena; Wichmann, Ignacio A.; Saavedra, Nicolas; Guevara, Francisca; Villegas, Jaime; Arrese, Marco; Ferreccio, Catterina; Alexis M. Kalergis, Alexis M.; Miquel, Juan Francisco; Espinoza, Jaime A.; Roa, Juan C.Gallbladder stones (cholecystolithiasis) are the main risk factor for gallbladder cancer (GBC), a lethal biliary malignancy with poor survival rates worldwide. Gallbladder stones are thought to damage the gallbladder epithelium and trigger chronic inflammation. Preneoplastic lesions that arise in such an inflammatory microenvironment can eventually develop into invasive carcinoma, through mechanisms that are not fully understood. Here, we developed a novel gallbladder preneoplasia mouse model through the administration of two lithogenic diets (a low- or a high-cholesterol diet) in wild-type C57BL/6 mice over a period of 9 months. Additionally, we evaluated the chemopreventive potentials of the anti-inflammatory drug aspirin and the cholesterol absorption inhibitor ezetimibe. Both lithogenic diets induced early formation of gallbladder stones, together with extensive inflammatory changes and widespread induction of metaplasia, an epithelial adaptation to tissue injury. Dysplastic lesions were presented only in mice fed with high-cholesterol diet (62.5%) in late stages (9th month), and no invasive carcinoma was observed at any stage. The cholesterol absorption inhibitor ezetimibe inhibited gallbladder stone formation and completely prevented the onset of metaplasia and dysplasia in both lithogenic diets, whereas aspirin partially reduced metaplasia development only in the low-cholesterol diet setting. This model recapitulates several of the structural and inflammatory findings observed in human cholecystolithiasic gallbladders, making it relevant for the study of gallbladder carcinogenesis. In addition, our results suggest that the use of cholesterol absorption inhibitors and anti-inflammatory drugs can be evaluated as chemopreventive strategies to reduce the burden of GBC among high-risk populations.Item Exosomes released upon mitochondrial ASncmtRNA knockdown reduce tumorigenic properties of malignant breast cancer cells.(Nature Publishing Group, 2020) Lobos-González, Lorena; Bustos, Rocío; Campos, América; Silva, Valeria; Silva, Verónica; Jeldes, Emanuel; Salomon, Carlos; Varas-Godoy, Manuel; Cáceres-Verschae, Albano; Durán, Eduardo; Vera, Tamara; Ezquer, Fernando; Ezquer, Marcelo; Burzio, Verónica; Villegas, JaimeDuring intercellular communication, cells release extracellular vesicles such as exosomes, which contain proteins, ncRNAs and mRNAs that can influence proliferation and/or trigger apoptosis in recipient cells, and have been proposed to play an essential role in promoting invasion of tumor cells and in the preparation of metastatic niches. Our group proposed the antisense non-coding mitochondrial RNA (ASncmtRNA) as a new target for cancer therapy. ASncmtRNA knockdown using an antisense oligonucleotide (ASO-1537S) causes massive death of tumor cells but not normal cells and strongly reduces metastasis in mice. In this work, we report that exosomes derived from ASO-1537S-treated MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells (Exo-1537S) inhibits tumorigenesis of recipient cells, in contrast to exosomes derived from control-ASO-treated cells (Exo-C) which, in contrast, enhance these properties. Furthermore, an in vivo murine peritoneal carcinomatosis model showed that Exo-1537S injection reduced tumorigenicity compared to controls. Proteomic analysis revealed the presence of Lactadherin and VE-Cadherin in exosomes derived from untreated cells (Exo-WT) and Exo-C but not in Exo-1537S, and the latter displayed enrichment of proteasomal subunits. These results suggest a role for these proteins in modulation of tumorigenic properties of exosome-recipient cells. Our results shed light on the mechanisms through which ASncmtRNA knockdown affects the preparation of breast cancer metastatic niches in a peritoneal carcinomatosis model.Publication Knockdown of Antisense Noncoding Mitochondrial RNA Reduces Tumorigenicity of Patient-Derived Clear Cell Renal Carcinoma Cells in an Orthotopic Xenograft Mouse Model(2024) Araya, Mariela; Sepúlveda, Francisca; Villegas, Jaime; Alarcón, Luis; Burzio, Luis; Burzio, Verónica; Borgna, VincenzoClear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC) is the most prevalent form of renal cancer and its treatment is hindered by a resistance to targeted therapies, immunotherapies and combinations of both. We have reported that the knockdown of the antisense noncoding mitochondrial RNAs (ASncmtRNAs) with chemically modified antisense oligonucleotides induces proliferative arrest and apoptotic death in tumor cells from many human and mouse cancer types. These studies have been mostly performed in vitro and in vivo on commercially available cancer cell lines and have shown that in mouse models tumor growth is stunted by the treatment. The present work was performed on cells derived from primary and metastatic ccRCC tumors. We established primary cultures from primary and metastatic ccRCC tumors, which were subjected to knockdown of ASncmtRNAs in vitro and in vivo in an orthotopic xenograft model in NOD/SCID mice. We found that these primary ccRCC cells are affected in the same way as tumor cell lines and in the orthotopic model tumor growth was significantly reduced by the treatment. This study on patient-derived ccRCC tumor cells represents a model closer to actual patient ccRCC tumors and shows that knockdown of ASncmtRNAs poses a potential treatment option for these patients.Item Mitochondrial ncRNA targeting induces cell cycle arrest and tumor growth inhibition of MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells through reduction of key cell cycle progression factors(2019) Fitzpatrick, Christopher; Bendek, Maximiliano F.; Briones, Macarena; Farfán, Nicole; Silva, Valeria A.; Nardocci, Gino; Montecino, Martín; Boland, Anne; Deleuze, Jean-Francois; Villegas, Jaime; Villota, Claudio; Silva, Verónica; Lobos-González, Lorena; Borgna, Vincenzo; Barrey, Eric; Burzio, Luis O.; Burzio, Verónica A.The family of long noncoding mitochondrial RNAs (ncmtRNAs), comprising sense (SncmtRNA), and antisense (ASncmtRNA-1 and ASncmtRNA-2) members, are differentially expressed according to cell proliferative status; SncmtRNA is expressed in all proliferating cells, while ASncmtRNAs are expressed in normal proliferating cells, but is downregulated in tumor cells. ASncmtRNA knockdown with an antisense oligonucleotide induces massive apoptosis in tumor cell lines, without affecting healthy cells. Apoptotic death is preceded by proliferation blockage, suggesting that these transcripts are involved in cell cycle regulation. Here, we show that ASncmtRNA knockdown induces cell death preceded by proliferative blockage in three different human breast cancer cell lines. This effect is mediated by downregulation of the key cell cycle progression factors cyclin B1, cyclin D1, CDK1, CDK4, and survivin, the latter also constituting an essential inhibitor of apoptosis, underlying additionally the onset of apoptosis. The treatment also induces an increase in the microRNA hsa-miR-4485-3p, whose sequence maps to ASncmtRNA-2 and transfection of MDA-MB-231 cells with a mimic of this miRNA induces cyclin B1 and D1 downregulation. Other miRNAs that are upregulated include nuclear-encoded hsa-miR-5096 and hsa-miR-3609, whose mimics downregulate CDK1. Our results suggest that ASncmtRNA targeting blocks tumor cell proliferation through reduction of essential cell cycle proteins, mediated by mitochondrial and nuclear miRNAs. This work adds to the elucidation of the molecular mechanisms behind cell cycle arrest preceding tumor cell apoptosis induced by ASncmtRNA knockdown. As proof-of-concept, we show that in vivo knockdown of ASncmtRNAs results in drastic inhibition of tumor growth in a xenograft model of MDA-MB-231 subcutaneous tumors, further supporting this approach for the development of new therapeutic strategies against breast cancer.Item Targeting antisense mitochondrial noncoding RNAs induces bladder cancer cell death and inhibition of tumor growth through reduction of survival and invasion factors.(Ivyspring International Publisher, 2020) Borgna, Vincenzo; Lobos-González, Lorena; Guevara, Francisca; Landerer, Eduardo; Bendek, Maximiliano; Ávila, Rodolfo; Silva, Verónica; Villota, Claudio; Araya, Mariela; Rivas, Alexis; López, Constanza; Socías, Teresa; Castillo, Jorge; Alarcón, Luis; Burzio, Luis; Burzio, Verónica; Villegas, JaimeKnockdown of the antisense noncoding mitochondrial RNAs (ASncmtRNAs) induces apoptotic death of several human tumor cell lines, but not normal cells, supporting a selective therapy against different types of cancer. In this work, we evaluated the effects of knockdown of ASncmtRNAs on bladder cancer (BCa). We transfected the BCa cell lines UMUC-3, RT4 and T24 with the specific antisense oligonucleotide Andes-1537S, targeted to the human ASncmtRNAs. Knockdown induced a strong inhibition of cell proliferation and increase in cell death in all three cell lines. As observed in UMUC-3 cells, the treatment triggered apoptosis, evidenced by loss of mitochondrial membrane potential and Annexin V staining, along with activation of procaspase-3 and downregulation of the anti-apoptotic factors survivin and Bcl-xL. Treatment also inhibited cell invasion and spheroid formation together with inhibition of N-cadherin and MMP 11. In vivo treatment of subcutaneous xenograft UMUC-3 tumors in NOD/SCID mice with Andes-1537S induced inhibition of tumor growth as compared to saline control. Similarly, treatment of a high-grade bladder cancer PDX with Andes-1537S resulted in a strong inhibition of tumor growth. Our results suggest that ASncmtRNAs could be potent targets for bladder cancer as adjuvant therapy.