Nanoquinacrine caused apoptosis in oral cancer stem cells by disrupting the interaction between GLI1 and β catenin through activation of GSK3β
2017
Abstract Presences of cancer stem cells (CSCs) in a bulk of cancer cells are responsible for tumor relapse, metastasis and drug resistance in oral cancer. Due to high drug efflux, DNA repair and self-renewable capacity of CSCs, the conventional chemotherapeutic agents are unable to kill the CSCs. CSCs utilizes Hedgehog (HH-GLI), WNT-β catenin signalling for its growth and development. GSK3β negatively regulates both the pathways in CSCs. Here, we have shown that a nano-formulated bioactive small molecule inhibitor Quinacrine (NQC) caused apoptosis in oral cancer stem cells (OCSCs; isolated from different oral cancer cells and oral cancer patient derived primary cells) by down regulating WNT-β catenin and HH-GLI components through activation of GSK3β. NQC activates GSK3β in transcriptional and translational level and reduces β catenin and GLI1 as well as downstream target gene of both the pathways Cyclin D1, C-Myc. The transcription factor activity of both the pathways was also reduced by NQC treatment. GSK3β, β catenin and GLI1 interacts with each other and NQC disrupts the co-localization and interaction between β catenin and GLI1 in OCSCs in a dose dependent manner through activation of GSK3β. Thus, data suggest NQC caused OCSCs death by disrupting the crosstalk between β catenin and GLI1 by activation of GSK3β.
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