A t-butyloxycarbonyl-modified Wnt5a-derived hexapeptide functions as a potent antagonist of Wnt5a-dependent melanoma cell invasion

  1. Veronika Jenei1,2,
  2. Victoria Sherwood1,3,
  3. Jillian Howlin,
  4. Rickard Linnskog,
  5. Annette Säfholm,
  6. Lena Axelsson and
  7. Tommy Andersson
  1. Cell and Experimental Pathology, Department of Laboratory Medicine, Lund University, Clinical Research Centre, Malmö University Hospital, SE-20502 Malmö, Sweden
  • 2Present address: Cancer Sciences Division, Southampton University School of Medicine, Somers Building, Southampton General Hospital, Tremona Road, SO16 6YD Southampton, United Kingdom.

  1. Edited by George Klein, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden, and approved September 29, 2009

  2. 1V.J. and V.S. contributed equally to this work. (received for review August 19, 2009)

Abstract

The influential role of Wnt5a in tumor progression underscores the requirement for developing molecules that can target Wnt5a-mediated cellular responses. In the aggressive skin cancer, melanoma, elevated Wnt5a expression promotes cell motility and drives metastasis. Two approaches can be used to counteract these effects: inhibition of Wnt5a expression or direct blockade of Wnt5a signaling. We have investigated both options in the melanoma cell lines, A2058 and HTB63. Both express Frizzled-5, which has been implicated as the receptor for Wnt5a in melanoma cells. However, only the HTB63 cell line expresses and secretes Wnt5a. In these cells, the cytokine, TGFβ1, controlled the expression of Wnt5a, but due to the unpredictable effects of TGFβ1 signaling on melanoma cell motility, targeting Wnt5a signaling via TGFβ1 was an unsuitable strategy to pursue. We therefore attempted to target Wnt5a signaling directly. Exogenous Wnt5a stimulation of A2058 cells increased adhesion, migration and invasion, all crucial components of tumor metastasis, and the Wnt5a-derived N-butyloxycarbonyl hexapeptide (Met-Asp-Gly-Cys-Glu-Leu; 0.766 kDa) termed Box5, abolished these responses. Box5 also inhibited the basal migration and invasion of Wnt5a-expressing HTB63 melanoma cells. Box5 antagonized the effects of Wnt5a on melanoma cell migration and invasion by directly inhibiting Wnt5a-induced protein kinase C and Ca2+ signaling, the latter of which we directly demonstrate to be essential for cell invasion. The Box5 peptide directly inhibits Wnt5a signaling, representing an approach to anti-metastatic therapy for otherwise rapidly progressive melanoma, and for other Wnt5a-stimulated invasive cancers.

Footnotes

  • 3To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: victoria.sherwood{at}med.lu.se
  • Author contributions: V.J., V.S., J.H., and T.A. designed research; V.J., V.S., J.H., R.L., A.S., and L.A. performed research; T.A. contributed new reagents/analytic tools; V.J., V.S., J.H., R.L., A.S., L.A., and T.A. analyzed data; and V.J., V.S., J.H., and T.A. wrote the paper.

  • Conflict of interest statement: V.J., V.S., J.H, A.S., L.A., and T.A. have filed a patent on Box5 and its use as an anti-metastatic compound.

  • This article is a PNAS Direct Submission.

  • This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/cgi/content/full/0909409106/DCSupplemental.

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