Publication:
NAMPT Is a Potent Oncogene in Colon Cancer Progression that Modulates Cancer Stem Cell Properties and Resistance to Therapy through Sirt1 and PARP.

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2017-12-04

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Lucena-Cacace, Antonio
Otero-Albiol, Daniel
Jiménez-García, Manuel P
Muñoz-Galvan, Sandra
Carnero, Amancio

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Purpose: Colorectal cancer is the second most common cancer in women and the third most common in men worldwide. However, despite current progress, many patients with advanced and metastatic tumors still die from the malignancy. Refractory disease often relies on nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD)-dependent mechanisms. NAD metabolism and a stable NAD regeneration circuit are required to maintain tissue homeostasis and metabolism. However, high levels of NAD confer therapy resistance to tumors.Experimental Design: Ectopic overexpression of nicotinamide phosphoribosil transferase (NAMPT) and shRNAs in colorectal cancer cell lines, tumorigenic and stemness properties and transcription measurement in culture and in vivo Transcriptional analysis in public databases. Therapeutic approaches.Results: NAMPT, the rate-limiting enzyme responsible for the highest source of physiologic NAD biosynthesis, increases tumorigenic properties and induces cancer stem cell-like properties through pathways that control stem cell signaling, thus enriching the cancer-initiating cell (CIC) population. Furthermore, NAMPT expression correlated with high levels of CIC-like cells in colon tumors directly extracted from patients, and transcription meta-analysis revealed that NAMPT is also a key factor that induces cancer stem pathways in colorectal cancer tumors. This effect is mediated by PARP and SIRT1. In addition, we report a novel NAMPT-driven signature that stratifies prognosis from high to low expression groups. The NAMPT signature contained SIRT1 and PARP1 levels as well as other cancer stem cell-related genes. Finally, NAMPT inhibition increased the sensitivity to apoptosis in both NAMPT-expressing cells and tumorspheres.Conclusions: NAMPT represents a novel therapeutic target in colon cancer progression and relapse, particularly the CIC subset of human colon cancers. Clin Cancer Res; 24(5); 1202-15. ©2017 AACR.

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Animals
Cell Line, Tumor
Colon
Colonic Neoplasms
Cytokines
Datasets as Topic
Drug Resistance, Neoplasm
Female
Gene Expression Profiling
Humans
Mice, Nude
NAD
Neoplastic Stem Cells
Nicotinamide Phosphoribosyltransferase
Oncogenes
Poly (ADP-Ribose) Polymerase-1
Prognosis
RNA, Small Interfering
Signal Transduction
Sirtuin 1
Survival Analysis
Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays

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