An FDA-Approved Antifungal, Ketoconazole, and Its Novel Derivative Suppress tGLI1-Mediated Breast Cancer Brain Metastasis by Inhibiting the DNA-Binding Activity of Brain Metastasis-Promoting Transcription Factor tGLI1.

dc.contributor.author

Doheny, Daniel

dc.contributor.author

Manore, Sara

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Sirkisoon, Sherona R

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Zhu, Dongqin

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Aguayo, Noah R

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Harrison, Alexandria

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Najjar, Mariana

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Anguelov, Marlyn

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Cox, Anderson O'Brien

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Furdui, Cristina M

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Watabe, Kounosuke

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Hollis, Thomas

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Thomas, Alexandra

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Strowd, Roy

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Lo, Hui-Wen

dc.date.accessioned

2024-02-01T14:24:42Z

dc.date.available

2024-02-01T14:24:42Z

dc.date.issued

2022-08

dc.description.abstract

The goal of this study is to identify pharmacological inhibitors that target a recently identified novel mediator of breast cancer brain metastasis (BCBM), truncated glioma-associated oncogene homolog 1 (tGLI1). Inhibitors of tGLI1 are not yet available. To identify compounds that selectively kill tGLI1-expressing breast cancer, we screened 1527 compounds using two sets of isogenic breast cancer and brain-tropic breast cancer cell lines engineered to stably express the control, GLI1, or tGLI1 vector, and identified the FDA-approved antifungal ketoconazole (KCZ) to selectively target tGLI1-positive breast cancer cells and breast cancer stem cells, but not tGLI1-negative breast cancer and normal cells. KCZ's effects are dependent on tGLI1. Two experimental mouse metastasis studies have demonstrated that systemic KCZ administration prevented the preferential brain metastasis of tGLI1-positive breast cancer and suppressed the progression of established tGLI1-positive BCBM without liver toxicities. We further developed six KCZ derivatives, two of which (KCZ-5 and KCZ-7) retained tGLI1-selectivity in vitro. KCZ-7 exhibited higher blood-brain barrier penetration than KCZ/KCZ-5 and more effectively reduced the BCBM frequency. In contrast, itraconazole, another FDA-approved antifungal, failed to suppress BCBM. The mechanistic studies suggest that KCZ and KCZ-7 inhibit tGLI1's ability to bind to DNA, activate its target stemness genes Nanog and OCT4, and promote tumor proliferation and angiogenesis. Our study establishes the rationale for using KCZ and KCZ-7 for treating and preventing BCBM and identifies their mechanism of action.

dc.identifier

cancers14174256

dc.identifier.issn

2072-6694

dc.identifier.issn

2072-6694

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/29959

dc.language

eng

dc.publisher

MDPI AG

dc.relation.ispartof

Cancers

dc.relation.isversionof

10.3390/cancers14174256

dc.rights.uri

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0

dc.subject

GLI1

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brain metastasis

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breast cancer

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cancer stem cells

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ketoconazole

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tGLI1

dc.title

An FDA-Approved Antifungal, Ketoconazole, and Its Novel Derivative Suppress tGLI1-Mediated Breast Cancer Brain Metastasis by Inhibiting the DNA-Binding Activity of Brain Metastasis-Promoting Transcription Factor tGLI1.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Thomas, Alexandra|0000-0001-9022-2229

pubs.begin-page

4256

pubs.issue

17

pubs.organisational-group

Duke

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School of Medicine

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Clinical Science Departments

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Medicine

pubs.organisational-group

Medicine, Medical Oncology

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

14

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