Cyclosporin A inhibits colon cancer cell growth independently of the calcineurin pathway
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Abstract
Chronic inflammation is a risk factor for the development of colon cancer, providing genotoxic insults, growth and pro angiogenic factors that can promote tumorigenesis and tumor growth. Immunomodulatory agents can interfere with the
inflammation that feeds cancer, but their impact on the transformed cell is poorly understood. The calcium/calcineurin
signaling pathway, through activation of NFAT, is essential for effective immune responses, and its inhibitors cyclosporin
A (CsA) and FK506 are used in the clinics to suppress immunity. Moreover, the kinases GSK3β and mTOR, modulated by PI 3K/Akt, can inhibit NFAT activity, suggesting a cross-talk between the calcium and growth factor signaling pathways. Both
NFAT and mTOR activity have been associated with tumorigenesis. We therefore investigated the impact of calcineurin
and PI-3K/mTOR inhibition in growth of human colon carcinoma cells. We show that despite the efficient inhibition
of NFAT1 activity, FK506 promotes tumor growth, whereas CsA inhibits it due to a delay in cell cycle progression and
induction of necroptosis. We found NFκB activation and mTORC1 activity not to be altered by CsA or FK506. Similarly,
changes to mitochondrial homeostasis were equivalent upon treatment with these drugs. We further show that, in our
model, NFAT1 activation is not modulated by PI3K/mTOR. We conclude that CsA slows cell cycle progression and induces
necroptosis of human carcinoma cell lines in a TGFβ-, NFAT-, NFκB- and PI3K/mTOR-independent fashion. Nevertheless,
our data suggest that CsA, in addition to its anti-inflammatory capacity, may target transformed colon and esophagus
carcinoma cells without affecting non-transformed cells, promoting beneficial tumoristatic effects.