Increased co-expression of PSMA2 and GLP-1 receptor in cervical cancer models in type 2 diabetes attenuated by Exendin-4: A translational case-control study.
EBioMedicine · 2021
Last updated 2026-05-28In cervical cancer samples from people with type 2 diabetes, two proteins—PSMA2 and GLP-1R—were found at higher levels than in non-diabetic samples (PSMA2: 3.22-fold increase, GLP-1R: 5.49-fold increase). The GLP-1 drug Exendin-4 reduced PSMA2 levels, slowed tumor growth, and lowered a marker of cell division in lab and animal tests. The study also found a strong positive link between PSMA2 and GLP-1R in diabetic-related cervical cancer, but not in non-diabetic cases.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | EBioMedicine, 2021 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 27 |
| Relative citation ratio | 2.01 |
| NIH percentile | 74 |
| Molecules | — |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Type 2 diabetes (T2D) increases the risk of many types of cancer. Dysregulation of proteasome-related protein degradation leads to tumorigenesis, while Exendin-4, a glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor (GLP-1R) agonist, possesses anti-cancer effects.
METHODS: We explored the co-expression of proteasome alpha 2 subunit (PSMA2) and GLP-1R in the Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) database and human cervical cancer specimens, supplemented by in vivo and in vitro studies using multiple cervical cancer cell lines.
FINDINGS: PSMA2 expression was increased in 12 cancer types in TCGA database and cervical cancer specimens from patients with T2D (T2D vs non-T2D: 3.22 (95% confidence interval CI: 1.38, 5.05) vs 1.00 (0.66, 1.34) fold change, P = 0.01). psma2-shRNA decreased cell proliferation in vitro, and tumour volume and Ki67 expression in vivo. Exendin-4 decreased psma2 expression, tumour volume and Ki67 expression in vivo. There was no change in GLP-1R expression in 12 cancer types in TCGA database. However, GLP-1R expression (T2D vs non-T2D: 5.49 (3.0, 8.1) vs 1.00 (0.5, 1.5) fold change, P < 0.001) was increased and positively correlated with PSMA2 expression in T2D-related (r = 0.68) but not in non-T2D-related cervical cancer specimens. This correlation was corroborated by in vitro experiments where silencing glp-1r decreased psma2 expression. Exendin-4 attenuated phospho-p65 and -IκB expression in the NF-κB pathway.
INTERPRETATION: PSMA2 and GLP-1R expression in T2D-related cervical cancer specimens was increased and positively correlated, suggesting hyperglycaemia might promote cancer growth by increasing PSMA2 expression which could be attenuated by Exendin-4.
FUNDING: This project was supported by Postdoctoral Fellowship Scheme, Direct Grant, Diabetes Research and Education Fund from the Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK).
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 33684886 ↗