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  • Inhibition of integrin β3, a binding partner of kallistatin, leads to reduced viability, invasion and proliferation in NCI-H446 cells.

Inhibition of integrin β3, a binding partner of kallistatin, leads to reduced viability, invasion and proliferation in NCI-H446 cells.

Cancer cell international (2016-12-17)
Guoquan Wang, Xiao Wang, Xiaoping Huang, Huiyong Yang, Suqiu Pang, Xiaolan Xie, Shulan Zeng, Junsheng Lin, Yong Diao
ABSTRACT

Kallistatin is a serine proteinase inhibitor and heparin-binding protein. It is considered an endogenous angiogenic inhibitor. In addition, multiple studies demonstrated that kallistatin directly inhibits cancer cell growth. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying these effects remain unclear. Pull-down, immunoprecipitation, and immunoblotting were used for binding experiments. To elucidate the mechanisms, integrin β3 knockdown (siRNA) or blockage (antibody treatment) on the cell surface of small the cell lung cancer NCI-H446 cell line was used. Interestingly, kallistatin was capable of binding integrin β3 on the cell surface of NCI-H446 cells. Meanwhile, integrin β3 knockdown or blockage resulted in loss of antitumor activities induced by kallistatin. Furthermore, kallistatin suppressed tyrosine phosphorylation of integrin β3 and its downstream signaling pathways, including FAK/-Src, AKT and Erk/MAPK. Viability, proliferation and migration of NCI-H446 cells were inhibited by kallistatin, with Bcl-2 and Grb2 downregulation, and Bax, cleaved caspase-9 and caspase 3 upregulation. These findings reveal a novel role for kallistatin in preventing small cell lung cancer growth and mobility, by direct interaction with integrin β3, leading to blockade of the related signaling pathway.

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Isopentenyl pyrophosphate triammonium salt solution, 1 mg/mL in methanol (:aqueous 10 mM NH4OH (7:3)), ≥95% (TLC)