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Repurposing Tranexamic Acid as an Anticancer Agent

Authors :
Coy D. Heldermon
Mary Elizabeth Law
Mengxiong Wang
Z. M. Dulloo
Brian K. Law
Ronald K. Castellano
Olga A. Guryanova
Elham Yaaghubi
Bradley J. Davis
Amanda F. Ghilardi
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

Tranexamic Acid (TA) is a clinically used antifibrinolytic that acts as a lysine mimetic to block binding of Plasminogen with Plasminogen activators, preventing conversion of Plasminogen to its proteolytically activated form, Plasmin. Previous studies suggested that TA may exhibit anticancer activity by blockade of extracellular Plasmin formation. Plasmin-mediated cleavage of the CDCP1 protein may increase its oncogenic functions through several downstream pathways. Results presented herein demonstrate that TA blocks Plasmin-mediated excision of the extracellular domain of the oncoprotein CDCP1. In vitro studies indicate that TA reduces the viability of a broad array of human and murine cancer cell lines, and breast tumor growth studies demonstrate that TA reduces cancer growth in vivo. Based on the ability of TA to mimic lysine and arginine, we hypothesized that TA may perturb multiple processes that involve Lys/Arg-rich protein sequences, and that TA may alter intracellular signaling pathways in addition to blocking extracellular Plasmin production. Indeed, TA-mediated suppression of tumor cell viability is associated with multiple biochemical actions, including inhibition of protein synthesis, reduced activating phosphorylation of STAT3 and S6K1, decreased expression of the MYC oncoprotein, and suppression of Lys acetylation. These findings suggest that TA or TA analogs may serve as lead compounds and inspire the production of new classes of anticancer agents that function by mimicking Lys and Arg.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........30e9d3507b20c68b9dc3d36ae9b0954b