Introduction
Chordoma is a rare bone cancer with an annual incidence of 1 in 1,000,000 people and a poor prognosis. It occurs mostly in the spine and whilst surgical resection is currently the most effective treatment this is difficult due to proximity to important structures. Chordomas are largely refractory to current chemotherapy, therefore, there is a pressing unmet clinical need for effective treatments (Stacchiotti & Sommer, Reference Stacchiotti and Sommer2015). Recently, the transcription factor Brachyury was identified as a primary drug target in chordoma and has been the subject of drug discovery efforts (Robinson et al., Reference Robinson, McFarlane and Wakeman2020; Sharifnia et al., Reference Sharifnia, Wawer, Chen, Huang, Weir, Sizemore, Lawlor, Goodale, Cowley, Vazquez, Ott, Francis, Sassi, Cogswell, Sheppard, Zhang, Gray, Clarke, Blagg and Schreiber2019).
All-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) is available as a generic drug and is used as a differentiation agent to treat acute promyelocytic leukaemia (APL; Fey & Buske, Reference Fey and Buske2013). U-CH1 chordoma cells treated with ATRA have reduced levels of TBXT (Brachyury gene) mRNA and reduced proliferative capacity (Aydemir et al., Reference Aydemir, Bayrak, Sahin, Atalay, Kose, Ozen, Sevli, Dalan, Yalvac, Dogruluk and Türe2012). This study extends and validates these findings offering further insight into the mechanisms of ATRA as a potential chordoma therapeutic agent.
Objective
The finding that ATRA reduces levels of TBXT (Brachyury) mRNA and reduces proliferative capacity opens three important questions. Firstly, does the reduction in mRNA levels feed through to measurable reduction in Brachyury protein? Secondly, is this effect of ATRA specific to the previously tested chordoma cell line, or is it a universal feature of chordoma cells? Finally, is the reduced proliferative capacity induced by ATRA in chordoma cells, which correlates to Brachyury loss, accompanied by the morphological changes observed following specific siRNA-mediated Brachyury depletion? The objectives of this current study are to address these outstanding and important questions.
Methods and materials
Cell culture and drug treatment. U-CH1 and JHC7 were obtained from ATCC and cultured as per ATCC guidelines. For all experiments described, 7.75 × 104 cells were seeded in each well of a 6 well plate. ATRA (Abcam) and DMSO (Sigma Aldrich) were added to the concentrations specified. Drug and media were refreshed every 3 days. Cell counting was performed using a TC20 cell counter (Biorad). Cells were imaged using an Evos Core microscope (AMG).
Protein extraction and western blot. Protein was extracted using M-PER buffer (ThermoFisher Scientific) according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Samples were denatured in Bolt LDS Sample buffer and Reducing Agent and run on an SDS-polyacrylamide pre cast gel (Bolt 4–12% Bis-Tris Plus, Life Technologies). Samples were transferred onto PVDF membrane in Towbin buffer (10% methanol) and the membrane was blocked in blocking solution (10% skimmed milk in PBS 0.1% Tween20). The membrane was incubated with primary antibody in blocking solution overnight and the membrane was incubated with secondary antibody at room temperature for 2 hours. Primary antibodies used were anti-Brachyury (Abcam, ab209665) and anti-GapDH (Santa Cruz, sc365062). Secondary (HRP linked) antibodies used were: anti-rabbit IgG (CST, 7074S), anti-mouse IgG (CST, 7076S).
Results
Treatment of chordoma cells with ATRA reduces Brachyury levels. JHC7 and U-CH1 chordoma cells were treated with 10 or 20 μM ATRA. ATRA caused a reduction in Brachyury levels in both lines, although this was less pronounced in JHC7 (Fig.1).
Treatment of chordoma cells with ATRA causes reduced proliferative capacity and morphological change. U-CH1 cells treated with ATRA have reduced proliferative capacity (Aydemir et al., Reference Aydemir, Bayrak, Sahin, Atalay, Kose, Ozen, Sevli, Dalan, Yalvac, Dogruluk and Türe2012). We treated U-CH1 cells with 20 μM ATRA and this resulted in the cell culture failing to increase cell numbers, thus validating the original study (Fig. 2). This was postulated to be a proliferative inhibition but the possibility of cell death or senescence were not excluded. To extend this we assessed whether there were any morphological changes apparent commensurate with those previously observed following specific siRNA-mediated Brachyury depletion (Hsu et al., Reference Hsu, Mohyeldin, Shah, Rhys, Johnson, Sedora-Roman, Kosztowski, Awad, McCarthy, Loeb, Wolinsky, Gokaslan and Quiñones-Hinojosa2011). ATRA treatment resulted in a loss of the physaliferous phenotype and the cells became more elongated and branching (Fig. 3).
Discussion
Brachyury has emerged as a target for the treatment of chordoma. The finding that ATRA results in the reduction of TBXT (Brachyury) mRNA brings ATRA into consideration as a repurposed therapeutic intervention. Here we have added additional insight into the relationship between the ATRA response pathway and Brachyury in chordoma cells. Our findings support a model in which ATRA triggers morphological change consistent with differentiation, which involves the shutdown of Brachyury activity. Indeed, such a model is supported by work in zebrafish notochord development, where ATRA treatment rapidly reduces levels of transcripts from the zebrafish orthologue gene, ntl (Martin & Kimelman, Reference Martin and Kimelman2010).
Conclusions
This study demonstrates that ATRA treatment lowers Brachyury levels, consistent with mRNA studies (Aydemir et al., Reference Aydemir, Bayrak, Sahin, Atalay, Kose, Ozen, Sevli, Dalan, Yalvac, Dogruluk and Türe2012). The extent to which ATRA influences Brachyury levels varies between chordoma cells types, so targeting Brachyury up-stream regulatory pathways with ATRA might not prove to be universally effective. It remains unclear if Brachyury is directly regulated by an ATRA response pathway, but we can conclude that response to ATRA cellular changes are highly similar to those observed for specific Brachyury depletion. Thus, repurposing of ATRA to target a Brachyury activating pathway is an important consideration.
Author Contributions
HR and JAW conceived and designed the study. HR conducted data gathering. HR performed statistical analyses. HR, JAW and RJM wrote the article.
Data Availability Statement
The data that support the findings of this study are openly available in the Open Science Framework at http://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/C2V6E, reference number [C2V6E].
Conflicts of Interest
HR, RJM and JAW declare no conflicts of interest.
Financial Declaration
This work was supported by Cancer Research Wales (HR, JAW) and Life Sciences Research Network Wales (HR, JAW).
Comments
Comments to the Author: While the discussion recognizes the potential lack of generalizability, it is not clear why the authors elected to repeat the published work in only the same cell line. The discussion could also recognize that additional preclinical investigation is needed to assess specificity and sufficiency of ATRA in chordoma treatment.