162 resultados para CORTICOSTEROID-INDUCED APOPTOSIS
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BACKGROUND: Eight human catalytic phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) isoforms exist which are subdivided into three classes. While class I isoforms have been well-studied in cancer, little is known about the functions of class II PI3Ks. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The expression pattern and functions of the class II PI3KC2β isoform were investigated in a panel of tumour samples and cell lines. RESULTS: Overexpression of PI3KC2β was found in subsets of tumours and cell lines from acute myeloid leukemia (AML), glioblastoma multiforme (GBM), medulloblastoma (MB), neuroblastoma (NB), and small cell lung cancer (SCLC). Specific pharmacological inhibitors of PI3KC2β or RNA interference impaired proliferation of a panel of human cancer cell lines and primary cultures. Inhibition of PI3KC2β also induced apoptosis and sensitised the cancer cells to chemotherapeutic agents. CONCLUSION: Together, these data show that PI3KC2β contributes to proliferation and survival in AML, brain tumours and neuroendocrine tumours, and may represent a novel target in these malignancies.
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RasGAP is a multifunctional protein that controls Ras activity and that is found in chromosomal passenger complexes. It also negatively or positively regulates apoptosis depending on the extent of its cleavage by caspase-3. RasGAP has been reported to bind to G3BP1 (RasGAP SH3-domain-binding protein 1), a protein regulating mRNA stability and stress granule formation. The region of RasGAP (amino acids 317-326) thought to bind to G3BP1 corresponds exactly to the sequence within fragment N2, a caspase-3-generated fragment of RasGAP, that mediates sensitization of tumor cells to genotoxins. While assessing the contribution of G3BP1 in the anti-cancer function of a cell-permeable peptide containing the 317-326 sequence of RasGAP (TAT-RasGAP₃₁₇₋₃₂₆), we found that, in conditions where G3BP1 and RasGAP bind to known partners, no interaction between G3BP1 and RasGAP could be detected. TAT-RasGAP₃₁₇₋₃₂₆ did not modulate binding of G3BP1 to USP10, stress granule formation or c-myc mRNA levels. Finally, TAT-RasGAP₃₁₇₋₃₂₆ was able to sensitize G3BP1 knock-out cells to cisplatin-induced apoptosis. Collectively these results indicate that G3BP1 and its putative RasGAP binding region have no functional influence on each other. Importantly, our data provide arguments against G3BP1 being a genuine RasGAP-binding partner. Hence, G3BP1-mediated signaling may not involve RasGAP.
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TAT-RasGAP317-326, a cell-permeable 10-amino acid-long peptide derived from the N2 fragment of p120 Ras GTPase-activating protein (RasGAP), sensitizes tumor cells to apoptosis induced by various anticancer therapies. This RasGAP-derived peptide, by targeting the deleted in liver cancer-1 (DLC1) tumor suppressor, also hampers cell migration and invasion by promoting cell adherence and by inhibiting cell movement. Here, we systematically investigated the role of each amino acid within the RasGAP317-326 sequence for the anticancer activities of TAT-RasGAP317-326. We report here that the first three amino acids of this sequence, tryptophan, methionine, and tryptophan (WMW), are necessary and sufficient to sensitize cancer cells to cisplatin-induced apoptosis and to reduce cell migration. The WMW motif was found to be critical for the binding of fragment N2 to DLC1. These results define the interaction mode between the active anticancer sequence of RasGAP and DLC1. This knowledge will facilitate the design of small molecules bearing the tumor-sensitizing and antimetastatic activities of TAT-RasGAP317-326.
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Résumé Les tumeurs sont diverses et hétérogènes, mais toutes partagent la capacité de proliférer sans contrôle. Une prolifération dérégulée de cellules couplée à une insensibilité à une réponse apoptotique constitue une condition minimale pour que l'évolution d'une tumeur se produise. Un des traitements les plus utilisés pour traité le cancer à l'heure actuelle sont les chimiothérapies, qui sont fréquemment des composés chimiques qui induisent des dommages dans l'ADN. Les agents anticancéreux sont efficaces seulement quand les cellules tumorales sont plus aisément tuées que le tissu normal environnant. L'efficacité de ces agents est en partie déterminée par leur capacité à induire l'apoptose. Nous avons récemment démontré que la protéine RasGAP est un substrat non conventionnel des caspases parce elle peut induire à la fois des signaux anti et pro-apoptotiques, selon l'ampleur de son clivage par les caspases. A un faible niveau d'activité des caspases, RasGAP est clivé, générant deux fragments (le fragment N et le fragment C). Le fragment N semble être un inhibiteur général de l'apoptose en aval de l'activation des caspases. À des niveaux plus élevés d'activité des caspases, la capacité du fragment N de contrecarrer l'apoptose est supprimée quand il est clivé à nouveau par les caspases. Ce dernier clivage produit deux nouveaux fragments, N 1 et N2, qui contrairement au fragment N sensibilisent efficacement des cellules cancéreuses envers des agents chimiothérapeutiques. Dans cette étude nous avons prouvé qu'un peptide, appelé par la suite TAT-RasGAP317-326, qui est dérivé du fragment N2 de RasGAP et est rendu perméable aux cellules, sensibilise spécifiquement des cellules cancéreuses à trois génotoxines différentes utilisées couramment dans des traitements anticancéreux, et cela dans des modèles in vitro et in vivo. Il est important de noté que ce peptide semble ne pas avoir d'effet sur des cellules non cancéreuses. Nous avons également commencé à caractériser les mécanismes moléculaires expliquant les fonctions de sensibilisation de TAT-RasGAP317-326. Nous avons démontré que le facteur de transcription p53 et une protéine sous son activité transcriptionelle, nommée Puma, sont indispensables pour l'activité de TAT-RasGAP317-326. Nous avons également prouvé que TAT-RasGAP317-326 exige la présence d'une protéine appelée G3BP1, une protéine se liant a RasGAP, pour potentialisé les effets d'agents anticancéreux. Les données obtenues dans cette étude montrent qu'il pourrait être possible d'augmenter l'efficacité des chimiothérapies à l'aide d'un composé capable d'augmenter la sensibilité des tumeurs aux génotoxines et ainsi pourrait permettre de traiter de manière plus efficace des patients sous traitement chimiothérapeutiques. Summary Tumors are diverse and heterogeneous, but all share the ability to proliferate without control. Deregulated cell proliferation coupled with suppressed apoptotic sensitivity constitutes a minimal requirement upon which tumor evolution occurs. One of the most commonly used treatments is chemotherapy, which frequently uses chemical compounds that induce DNA damages. Anticancer agents are effective only when tumors cells are more readily killed than the surrounding normal tissue. The efficacy of these agents is partly determined by their ability to induce apoptosis. We have recently demonstrated that the protein RasGAP is an unconventional caspase substrate because it can induce both anti- and pro-apoptotic signals, depending on the extent of its cleavage by caspases. At low levels of caspase activity, RasGAP is cleaved, generating an N-terminal fragment (fragment N) and a C-terminal fragment (fragment C). Fragment N appears to be a general Mocker of apoptosis downstream of caspase activation. At higher levels of caspase activity, the ability of fragment N to counteract apoptosis is suppressed when it is further cleaved. This latter cleavage event generates two fragments, N1 and N2, which in contrast to fragment N potently sensitizes cancer cells toward DNA-damaging agents induced apoptosis. In the present study we show that a cell permeable peptide derived from the N2 fragment of RasGAP, thereafter called TAT-RasGAP317-326, specifically sensitizes cancer cells to three different genotoxins commonly used in chemotherapy in vitro and in vivo models. Importantly this peptide seems not to have any effect on non cancer cells. We have also started to characterize the molecular mechanisms underlying the sensitizing functions of TAT-RasGAP317-326. We have demonstrated that the p53 transcription factor and a protein under its transcriptional activity, called Puma, are required for the activity of TATRasGAP317-326. We have also showed that TAT-RasGAP317-326 requires the presence of a protein called G3BP1, which have been shown to interact with RasGAP, to increase the effect of the DNA-damaging drug cisplatin. The data obtained in this study showed that it is possible to increase the efficacy of current used chemotherapies with a compound able to increase the efficacy of genotoxins which could be beneficial for patients subjected to chemotherapy.
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The macrophage is the niche of the intracellular pathogen Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Induction of macrophage apoptosis by CD4(+) or CD8(+) T cells is accompanied by reduced bacterial counts, potentially defining a host defense mechanism. We have already established that M. tuberculosis-infected primary human macrophages have a reduced susceptibility to Fas ligand (FasL)-induced apoptosis. To study the mechanisms by which M. tuberculosis prevents apoptotic signaling, we have generated a cell culture system based on PMA- and IFN-gamma-differentiated THP-1 cells recapitulating the properties of primary macrophages. In these cells, nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain 2 or TLR2 agonists and mycobacterial infection protected macrophages from apoptosis and resulted in NF-kappaB nuclear translocation associated with up-regulation of the antiapoptotic cellular FLIP. Transduction of a receptor-interacting protein-2 dominant-negative construct showed that nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain 2 is not involved in protection in the mycobacterial infection system. In contrast, both a dominant-negative construct of the MyD88 adaptor and an NF-kappaB inhibitor abrogated the protection against FasL-mediated apoptosis, showing the implication of TLR2-mediated activation of NF-kappaB in apoptosis protection in infected macrophages. The apoptosis resistance of infected macrophages might be considered as an immune escape mechanism, whereby M. tuberculosis subverts innate immunity signaling to protect its host cell against FasL(+)-specific cytotoxic lymphocytes.
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Résumé La masse de cellules β sécrétrices d'insuline est un tissu dynamique qui s'adapte aux variations de la demande métabolique pour assurer une normoglycémie. Cette adaptation se fait par un changement de sécrétion d'insuline et de la masse totale des cellules β. Une perte complète ou partielle des cellules β conduit respectivement à un diabète de type 1 et de type 2. Les mécanismes qui régulent la masse de cellules β et maintiennent leur phénotype differencié sont encore peu connus. Leur identification est nécessaire pour comprendre le développement du diabète et développer des stratégies de traitement. La greffe d'îlots est une approche thérapeutique prometteuse pour le diabète de type 1, mais est limitée par une perte précoce des cellules β due à une apoptose induite par des cytokines. Afin d'améliorer la survie des cellules β lors de la greffe d'îlots, le premier but était de trouver des peptides pouvant bloquer l'apoptose induite par FasL et TNF-α. Pour ce faire, deux librairies de phages ont été criblées pour sélectionner des peptides se liant au Fas DD ou au TNFRl DD. Nous avons identifié six peptides différents. Cependant, aucun d'entre eux n'était capable de protéger les cellules de l'apoptose induite par FasL ou TNF-α. Deuxièmement, le GLP-1 est une hormone qui stimule la sécrétion d'insuline, et est impliquée dans la prolifération des cellules β, la différentiation, et inhibe l'apoptose. Nous avons fait l'hypothèse que le GLP-1 joue un rôle crucial dans le contrôle de la masse et de la fonction des cellules β. Afin de l'évaluer, une analyse par puce à ADN a été réalisée en comparant des cellules βTC-Tet traitées avec du GLP-1 à des cellules non-traitées. 376 gènes régulés ont été identifiés, dont RGS2, CREM, ICERI et DUSP14, augmentés significativement par le GLP-1. Nous avons confirmé que le GLP-1 augmente l'expression de ces gènes, aussi bien au niveau des transcripts que des protéines. De plus, nous avons montré que le GLP-1 induit leur expression par activation de la voie cAMP/PKA, et nécessite l'entrée de calcium extracellulaire. D'après leur fonction biologique, nous avons ensuite supposé que ces gènes pourraient agir comme régulateurs négatifs de la signalisation du GLP-l, et donc freiner son effet proliférateur. Pour vérifier notre hypothèse, des siRNAs contre ces gènes ont été développés, et leurs effets sur la prolifération des cellules β seront évalués ultérieurement. Abstract The pancreatic β-cell mass is a dynamic tissue which adapts to variations in metabolic demand in order to ensure normoglycemia. This adaptation occurs through a change in both insulin secretion and the total mass of ,β-cells. An absolute or relative loss of β-cells leads to type 1 and type 2 diabetes, respectively. The mechanisms that regulate the pancreatic β-cell mass and maintain the fully differentiated phenotype of the insulin-secreting β-cells are only poorly defined. Their identification is required to understand the progression of diabetes, but also to design strategies for the treatment of diabetes. Islet transplantation is a promising therapeutic approach for type 1 diabetes, but it is still limited by an early graft loss due to cytokine-induced apoptosis. In order to improve β-cell survival during islet transplantation, our first goal was to find novel blockers of FasL- and TNF-α-mediated cell death in the form of peptides. To that end, we screened two phage display libraries to select Fas DD- or TNFR1 DD-binding peptides. We identified six different small peptides. However, none of these peptides was able to prevent cells from FasL- or TNF-α-mediated apoptosis. Secondly, GLP-1 is a hormone that has been shown to stimulate insulin secretion and to be involved in β-cell proliferation, differentiation and inhibition of apoptosis. We hypothesized that GLP-1 plays a crucial role to control mass and function of β-cells. To evaluate this hypothesis, we performed a cDNA microarray analysis with GLP-1-treated βTC-Tet cells compared to untreated cells. We found 376 regulated genes, among these, RGS2, CREM, ICERI and DUSP14, which were significantly upregulated by GLP-1. We confirmed that both their mRNA and protein levels were strongly and rapidly increased after GLP-1 treatment. Moreover, we found that GLP-1 activates their expression mainly through the activation of the cAMP/PKA signaling pathway, and requires extracellular calcium entry. According to their biological function, we then hypothesized that these genes might act as negative regulators of the GLP-1 signaling. In particular, they might brake the effects of GLP-1 on β-cell proliferation. To verify this hypothesis, siRNAs against these genes were developed. The effect of these siRNAs on GLP-1-induced β-cell proliferation will be evaluated later.
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Peptides that interfere with the natural resistance of cancer cells to genotoxin-induced apoptosis may improve the efficacy of anticancer regimens. We have previously reported that a cell-permeable RasGAP-derived peptide (TAT-RasGAP(317-326)) specifically sensitizes tumor cells to genotoxin-induced apoptosis in vitro. Here, we examined the in vivo stability of a protease-resistant D-form of the peptide, RI.TAT-RasGAP(317-326), and its effect on tumor growth in nude mice bearing subcutaneous human colon cancer HCT116 xenograft tumors. After intraperitoneal injection, RI.TAT-RasGAP(317-326) persisted in the blood of nude mice for more than 1 hour and was detectable in various tissues and subcutaneous tumors. Tumor-bearing mice treated daily for 7 days with RI.TAT-RasGAP(317-326) (1.65 mg/kg body weight) and cisplatin (0.5 mg/kg body weight) or doxorubicin (0.25 mg/kg body weight) displayed reduced tumor growth compared with those treated with either genotoxin alone (n = 5-7 mice per group; P = .004 and P = .005, respectively; repeated measures analysis of variance [ANOVA, two-sided]). This ability of the RI.TAT-RasGAP(317-326) peptide to enhance the tumor growth inhibitory effect of cisplatin was still observed at peptide doses that were at least 150-fold lower than the dose lethal to 50% of mice. These findings provide the proof of principle that RI.TAT-RasGAP(317-326) may be useful for improving the efficacy of chemotherapy in patients.
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BACKGROUND: Activation of Fas (CD95) by its ligand (FasL) rapidly induces cell death through recruitment and activation of caspase-8 via the adaptor protein Fas-associated death domain protein (FADD). However, Fas signals do not always result in apoptosis but can also trigger a pathway that leads to proliferation. We investigated the level at which the two conflicting Fas signals diverge and the protein(s) that are implicated in switching the response. RESULTS: Under conditions in which proliferation of CD3-activated human T lymphocytes is increased by recombinant FasL, there was activation of the transcription factors NF-kappaB and AP-1 and recruitment of the caspase-8 inhibitor and FADD-interacting protein FLIP (FLICE-like inhibitory protein). Fas-recruited FLIP interacts with TNF-receptor associated factors 1 and 2, as well as with the kinases RIP and Raf-1, resulting in the activation of the NF-kappaB and extracellular signal regulated kinase (Erk) signaling pathways. In T cells these two signal pathways are critical for interleukin-2 production. Increased expression of FLIP in T cells resulted in increased production of interleukin-2. CONCLUSIONS: We provide evidence that FLIP is not simply an inhibitor of death-receptor-induced apoptosis but that it also mediates the activation of NF-kappaB and Erk by virtue of its capacity to recruit adaptor proteins involved in these signaling pathways.
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Cancer is the second cause of death after cardio-vascular diseases in economically developed countries. Two of the most commonly used anti-cancer therapies are chemo and radiotherapy. Despite the remarkable advances made in term of delivery and specificity of these two anti-tumor regimens, their toxicity towards healthy tissue remains a limitation. A promising approach to overcome this obstacle would be the utilization of therapeutic peptides that specifically augment the sensitivity of tumoral cells to treatments. Lower therapeutical doses would then be required to kill malignant cells, limiting toxic effects on healthy tissues. It was previously shown in our laboratory that the caspase-3 generated fragment N2 of RasGAP is able to potentiate the genotoxin-induced apoptosis selectively in cancer cells. In this work we show that fragment N2 strictly requires a cytoplasmic localization to deliver its pro-apoptotic effect in genotoxin-treated cancer cells. The tumor sensitizing capacity of fragment N2 was found to reside within the 10 amino acid sequence 317-326. Our laboratory earlier demonstrated that a peptide corresponding to amino acids 317 to 326 of RasGAP fused to the TAT cell permeable moiety, called TAT-RasGAP317.326, is able to sensitize cancer cells, but not normal cells, to genotoxin-induced apoptosis. In the present study we describe the capacity of TAT-RasGAP 317.326 to sensitize tumors to both chemo and radiotherapy in an in vivo mouse model. The molecular mechanism underlying the TAT-RasGAP 317.326-mediated sensitization starts now to be elucidated. We demonstrate that G3BP1, an endoribonuclease binding to amino acids 317-326 of RasGAP, is not involved in the sensitization mechanism. We also provide evidence showing that TAT-RasGAP3 17-326 potentiates the genotoxin-mediated activation of Bax in a tBid-dependent manner. Altogether our results show that TAT-RasGAP 317.326 could be potentially used in cancer therapy as sensitizer, in order to improve the efficacy of chemo and radiotherapy and prolong the life expectancy of cancer patients. Moreover, the understanding of the TAT-RasGAP317.326 mode of action might help to unravel the mechanisms by which cancer cells resist to chemo and radiotherapy and therefore to design more targeted and efficient anti-tumoral strategies.
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Viral infection often perturbs host cell signaling pathways including those involving mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs). We now show that reovirus infection results in the selective activation of c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK). Reovirus-induced JNK activation is associated with an increase in the phosphorylation of the JNK-dependent transcription factor c-Jun. Reovirus serotype 3 prototype strains Abney (T3A) and Dearing (T3D) induce significantly more JNK activation and c-Jun phosphorylation than does the serotype 1 prototypic strain Lang (T1L). T3D and T3A also induce more apoptosis in infected cells than T1L, and there was a significant correlation between the ability of these viruses to phosphorylate c-Jun and induce apoptosis. However, reovirus-induced apoptosis, but not reovirus-induced c-Jun phosphorylation, is inhibited by blocking TRAIL/receptor binding, suggesting that apoptosis and c-Jun phosphorylation involve parallel rather than identical pathways. Strain-specific differences in JNK activation are determined by the reovirus S1 and M2 gene segments, which encode viral outer capsid proteins (sigma1 and mu1c) involved in receptor binding and host cell membrane penetration. These same gene segments also determine differences in the capacity of reovirus strains to induce apoptosis, and again a significant correlation between the capacity of T1L x T3D reassortant reoviruses to both activate JNK and phosphorylate c-Jun and to induce apoptosis was shown. The extracellular signal-related kinase (ERK) is also activated in a strain-specific manner following reovirus infection. Unlike JNK activation, ERK activation could not be mapped to specific reovirus gene segments, suggesting that ERK activation and JNK activation are triggered by different events during virus-host cell interaction.
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Résume Les caspases sont un groupe de protéases à cystéine qui s?activent lors de l'apoptose. Leur activation induit le clivage de nombreuses cibles intracellulaires, conduisant à l'activation de voies pro-apoptotiques et finalement au démantèlement des cellules. Cependant, des caspases ont été décrites dans de nombreux autres processus indépendants de l'apoptose, notamment dans la physiologie des cellules hématopoïétiques, des cellules musculaires, des cellules de la peau et des neurones. Comment est-ce que les cellules réconcilient-elles ces deux fonctions distinctes? Une partie de la réponse réside dans la nature des substrats qu'elles clivent. Certains substrats, une fois clivées, deviennent anti-apoptotiques. RasGAP est une cible des caspases et contient deux sites spécifiques de clivage par les caspases. Lorsque le niveau d?activité des caspases est faible le clivage de RasGAP produit un fragment N-terminal qui active un signal antiapoptotique, relayé par la voie de Ras/PI3K/Akt. Lorsque le niveau d?activité des caspases est plus élevé le fragment RasGAP N-terminal est à nouveau clivé, perdant de ce fait ses propriétés anti-apoptotiques. Dans cette étude, nous avons mis en évidence que l'activation de la voie Ras/PI3K/Akt induite par le fragment RasGAP N-terminal dépend de RasGAP lui-même. Par ailleurs, dans le but d?étudier l?importance du clivage de RasGAP dans un contexte physiologique, nous avons développé un modèle animal exprimant une gêne mutée de RasGAP de sorte que la protéine est devenu insensible a l?action de caspases. Les données préliminaires obtenues montrent que le clivage de RasGAP n'est pas indispensable pour le développement et l?homéostasie chez la souris. Finalement, nous avons développé une souris transgénique surexprimant le fragment de RasGAP N-terminal dans les cellules ß du pancréas. Les animaux obtenus ne montrent pas de symptômes dans les conditions basales bien qu?ils soient plus résistants au diabète induit expérimentalement. Ces résultats montrent que la surexpression du fragment N-terminal de RasGAP protége efficacement les cellules ß du pancréas de l?apoptose induite par le stress sans pourtant affecter d?autres paramètres physiologiques des Ilot de Langerhans.<br/><br/>Caspases are a series of proteases that are activated during apoptosis. Their activation causes the cleavage of numerous intracellular targets, which leads to cell dismantling and activation of pro-apoptotic pathways. Caspases have been found to be involved in the physiology of numerous cell types including haematopoietic cells, muscle cells, skin cells and neurons. How cells conciliate these two opposite functions? Part of the answer lies in the nature of the substrates they cleave. Some substrates become anti-apoptotic once cleaved by caspases. RasGAP is a caspase substrate that possesses two conserved caspase-cleavage sites. At low caspase activity, RasGAP is first cleaved and the generated N-terminal fragment activates a potent anti-apoptotic signal, mediated by the Ras/PI3K/Akt pathway. At higher caspase activity, the N-terminal fragment is further cleaved thereby losing its anti-apoptotic properties. In the present study we show that the activation of the Ras/PI3K/Akt pathway mediated by RasGAP N-terminal fragment is dependent on RasGAP itself. Moreover, to study the role of RasGAP cleavage in a physiological model, we have developed a knock-in mouse model expressing a RasGAP mutant that is not cleavable by caspases. Preliminary data shows that RasGAP cleavage is not required for normal development and homeostasis in mice. Finally, we have developed a transgenic mouse model overexpressing RasGAP N-terminal fragment in the ß-cell of the pancreas. In basal conditions, these mice show no difference with their wt counterparts. However, they are protected against experimentally induced diabetes. These results indicate that fragment N can protect ? cells from stress-induced apoptosis without affecting other physiological parameters of the Islets.
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Le sarcome d'Ewing (SE) est la 2ème tumeur des os la plus fréquente chez les enfants, et le pronostic est sombre au stade métastatique. La pathogenèse du SE repose sur une translocation, provocant la fusion du domaine activateur du facteur de transcription EWS, avec la partie liant l'ADN de la protéine FLI-1. Les cellules souches cancéreuses (CSC) sont supposées être les moteurs de la croissance tumorale, et représente de ce fait des cibles thérapeutiques préférentielles. Dans ce travail nous nous sommes efforcés de comprendre, ainsi que de cibler les mécanismes liés à l'émergence des CSC dans le sarcome d'Ewing. La formation des CSC du ES est liée à un défaut de maturation des miRNAs provoqué par une sous-expression d'un gène, TARBP2, dans les CSC. Ce défaut de maturation peut être corrigé par un traitement des cellules avec de l'enoxacine, une fluoroquinolone utilisée pour traiter les infections urinaires. L'enoxacine seule n'étant pas suffisante pour éradiquer les tumeurs in vivo, nous avons testé la combinaison d'une thérapie ciblée sur les CSC avec une chimiothérapie classique, la doxorubicine, ciblant les cellules différentiées. In vitro l'enoxacine induit l'apoptose dans les CCS sans affecter les cellules différentiées, alors que à l'inverse, la doxorubicine n'affecte que les cellules de la « masse » tumorale. In vivo la combinaison de ces deux drogues inhibe la croissance de tumeurs provenant de cellules primaires xenotranplantées et éradique les CSCs. Nos résultats mettent en lumière une nouvelle approche thérapeutique directement applicable pour le sarcome d'Ewing, et pourraient ainsi rapidement déboucher sur des essais cliniques. Dans la deuxième partie de ce travail nous avons essayé de comprendre comment EWS-FLI1, la protéine de fusion issue de la translocation chromosomique du sarcome d'Ewing conduit à la génération des CSC. Pour cela nous avons effectué des ChIPseq (immunoprecipitation de la chromatine suivi de séquençage) pour EWS-FLI1 ainsi que pour certaines modifications histoniques. -- Ewing sarcoma family tumors (ESFT) are the second most frequent bone tumors in children and have a high rate of recurrence when metastatic at presentation. The pathogenesis of Ewing sarcoma is underlayed by a translocation, leading to the fusion of the trans-activating domain of EWS with the FLU DNA binding domain. Cancer stem cells (CSCs) are thought to be the driving force of tumor growth. In this work we focused on understanding the mechanisms underlying ESFT CSC emergence as well as defining targeted therapeutic strategies. Emergence of CSCs in ESFT has been shown to arise from a defect in TARBP2-dependent microRNA maturation, which can be corrected by exposure to the fluoroquinolone enoxacin. As enoxacin alone is not sufficient to reverse tumor growth in vivo, we assessed the effect of combining a drug that abrogates CSC properties with doxorubicin, a standard-of-care therapy in ESFT. Primary ESFT CSCs and bulk tumor cells were treated with different concentration of drugs and displayed divergent responses to doxorubicin and enoxacin. Doxorubicin, which targets the tumor bulk, displayed toxicity toward primary adherent ESFT cells in culture but not to CSC-enriched ESFT spheres. Conversely, enoxacin induced apoptosis but only in ESFT spheres and specifically on the CD133+ population. In combination, the two drugs markedly depleted CSC and strongly reduced primary growth in xenograft assays of two primary ESFT. Our results identify a potentially attractive therapeutic strategy for ESFT that combines mechanism-based targeting of CSC using a low toxicity antibiotic with a standard-of-care cytotoxic drug, offering immediate applications for clinical evaluation. In the second part of this work we performed chromatin immunopercipitation on CSCs and bulk cells for EWS-FLI1 binding as well as some chromatin modifications, and concluded that EWS-FLI1 shows cell context dependent binding.
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PURPOSE: Pencil beam scanning and filter free techniques may involve dose-rates considerably higher than those used in conventional external-beam radiotherapy. Our purpose was to investigate normal tissue and tumour responses in vivo to short pulses of radiation. MATERIAL AND METHODS: C57BL/6J mice were exposed to bilateral thorax irradiation using pulsed (at least 40Gy/s, flash) or conventional dose-rate irradiation (0.03Gy/s or less) in single dose. Immunohistochemical and histological methods were used to compare early radio-induced apoptosis and the development of lung fibrosis in the two situations. The response of two human (HBCx-12A, HEp-2) tumour xenografts in nude mice and one syngeneic, orthotopic lung carcinoma in C57BL/6J mice (TC-1 Luc+), was monitored in both radiation modes. RESULTS: A 17Gy conventional irradiation induced pulmonary fibrosis and activation of the TGF-beta cascade in 100% of the animals 24-36 weeks post-treatment, as expected, whereas no animal developed complications below 23Gy flash irradiation, and a 30Gy flash irradiation was required to induce the same extent of fibrosis as 17Gy conventional irradiation. Cutaneous lesions were also reduced in severity. Flash irradiation protected vascular and bronchial smooth muscle cells as well as epithelial cells of bronchi against acute apoptosis as shown by analysis of caspase-3 activation and TUNEL staining. In contrast, the antitumour effectiveness of flash irradiation was maintained and not different from that of conventional irradiation. CONCLUSION: Flash irradiation shifted by a large factor the threshold dose required to initiate lung fibrosis without loss of the antitumour efficiency, suggesting that the method might be used to advantage to minimize the complications of radiotherapy.
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Exogenous administration of glucocorticoids is a widely used and efficient tool to investigate the effects of elevated concentrations of these hormones in field studies. Because the effects of corticosterone are dose and duration-dependent, the exact course of plasma corticosterone levels after exogenous administration needs to be known. We tested the performance of self-degradable corticosterone pellets (implanted under the skin) in elevating plasma corticosterone levels. We monitored baseline (sampled within 3min after capture) total corticosterone levels and investigated potential interactions with corticosteroid-binding-globulin (CBG) capacity and the endogenous corticosterone response to handling in Eurasian kestrel Falco tinnunculus and barn owl Tyto alba nestlings. Corticosterone pellets designed for a 7-day-release in rodents elevated circulating baseline total corticosterone during only 2-3 days compared to placebo-nestlings. Highest levels occurred 1-2days after implantation and levels decreased strongly thereafter. CBG capacity was also increased, resulting in a smaller, but still significant, increase in baseline free corticosterone levels. The release of endogenous corticosterone as a response to handling was strong in placebo-nestlings, but absent 2 and 8 days after corticosterone pellet implantation. This indicates a potential shut-down of the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis after the 2-3 days of elevated baseline corticosterone levels. 20 days after pellet implantation, the endogenous corticosterone response to handling of nestlings implanted with corticosterone pellets attained similar levels as in placebo-nestlings. Self-degradable pellets proved to be an efficient tool to artificially elevate circulating baseline corticosterone especially in field studies, requiring only one intervention. The resulting peak-like elevation of circulating corticosterone, the concomitant elevation of CBG capacity, and the absence of an endogenous corticosterone response to an acute stressor have to be taken into account.
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The activation of the transcription factor NF-kappaB often results in protection against apoptosis. In particular, pro-apoptotic tumor necrosis factor (TNF) signals are blocked by proteins that are induced by NF-kappaB such as TNFR-associated factor 1 (TRAF1). Here we show that TRAF1 is cleaved after Asp-163 when cells are induced to undergo apoptosis by Fas ligand (FasL). The C-terminal cleavage product blocks the induction of NF-kappaB by TNF and therefore functions as a dominant negative (DN) form of TRAF1. Our results suggest that the generation of DN-TRAF1 is part of a pro-apoptotic amplification system to assure rapid cell death.