Metabolites in a mouse cancer model enhance venous thrombogenicity through the aryl hydrocarbon receptor–tissue factor axis

M Belghasem, D Roth, S Richards… - Blood, The Journal …, 2019 - ashpublications.org
M Belghasem, D Roth, S Richards, MA Napolene, J Walker, W Yin, N Arinze, C Lyle…
Blood, The Journal of the American Society of Hematology, 2019ashpublications.org
Patients with malignancy are at 4-to 7-fold higher risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE), a
potentially fatal, yet preventable complication. Although general mechanisms of thrombosis
are enhanced in these patients, malignancy-specific triggers and their therapeutic
implication remain poorly understood. Here we examined a colon cancer–specific VTE
model and probed a set of metabolites with prothrombotic propensity in the inferior vena
cava (IVC) ligation model. Athymic mice injected with human colon adenocarcinoma cells …
Abstract
Patients with malignancy are at 4- to 7-fold higher risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE), a potentially fatal, yet preventable complication. Although general mechanisms of thrombosis are enhanced in these patients, malignancy-specific triggers and their therapeutic implication remain poorly understood. Here we examined a colon cancer–specific VTE model and probed a set of metabolites with prothrombotic propensity in the inferior vena cava (IVC) ligation model. Athymic mice injected with human colon adenocarcinoma cells exhibited significantly higher IVC clot weights, a biological readout of venous thrombogenicity, compared with the control mice. Targeted metabolomics analysis of plasma of mice revealed an increase in the blood levels of kynurenine and indoxyl sulfate (tryptophan metabolites) in xenograft-bearing mice, which correlated positively with the increase in the IVC clot size. These metabolites are ligands of aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) signaling. Accordingly, plasma from the xenograft-bearing mice activated the AHR pathway and augmented tissue factor (TF) and plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1) levels in venous endothelial cells in an AHR-dependent manner. Consistent with these findings, the endothelium from the IVC of xenograft-bearing animals revealed nuclear AHR and upregulated TF and PAI-1 expression, telltale signs of an activated AHR-TF/PAI-1 axis. Importantly, pharmacological inhibition of AHR activity suppressed TF and PAI-1 expression in endothelial cells of the IVC and reduced clot weights in both kynurenine-injected and xenograft-bearing mice. Together, these data show dysregulated tryptophan metabolites in a mouse cancer model, and they reveal a novel link between these metabolites and the control of the AHR-TF/PAI-1 axis and VTE in cancer.
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