35 resultados para Breast cancer cell line
Resumo:
The p53 gene is known to be one of the most commonly mutated genes in human cancers. Many squamous cell carcinomas of the head and neck (SCCHNs) have been shown to contain nonfunctional p53 as well. The use of p53-mediated gene therapy to treat such cancers has become an intensive area of research. Although there have been varied treatment responses to p53 gene therapy, the role that endogenous p53 status plays in this response has not been thoroughly examined. Because of this, the hypothesis of this study examined the role that the endogenous p53 status of cells plays in their response to p53 gene therapy. To test this, an adenoviral vector containing p53 (p53FAd) was administered to three squamous cell carcinoma lines with varied endogenous p53. The SCC9 cell line demonstrates no p53 protein expression, the SCC4 cell line displays overexpression of a mutant p53 protein, and the 1986LN cell line displays low to no expression of wild-type p53 protein as a consequence of human papillomavirus infection. After treatment with p53FAd, the cells were examined for evidence of exogenous p53 expression, growth suppression, alterations in cellular proteins, G1 growth arrest, apoptosis, and differentiation state. Each cell line exhibited exogenous p53 protein. Growth suppression was seen most prominently in the SCC9 cells, to some extent in the 1986LN cells, and little was seen with the SCC4 cells. WAF1/p21 protein was induced in all three cell lines, while PCNA, bcl-2, and bax expression was not significantly affected in any of the lines. Apoptosis developed first in SCC9 cells, next in 1986LN cells, with little seen in the SCC4 cells. The SCC9 line was the only line to show significant GI growth arrest. No significant differences were observed in the overall expression of differentiation markers, aside from increased keratin 13 mRNA levels in all three lines indicating a possible tendency toward differentiation. This study indicates that the endogenous p53 status of squamous cell carcinomas appears to play a critical role in determining the response to p53 adenoviral gene therapy. ^
Resumo:
Overexpression of the receptor tyrosine kinase p185ErbB2 confers taxol resistance in breast cancers and activation of p34Cdc2 is required for taxol-induced apoptosis and cytotoxicity. Here, we investigated the underlying mechanisms and found that overexpression of p185 ErbB2 inhibits taxol-induced apoptosis through two branches to inhibit activation of p34Cdc2. ^ Overexpression of p185ErbB2 in MDA-MB-435 cells by transfection transcriptionally upregulated p21Cip1, which associates with p34Cdc2, inhibits taxol-mediated p34Cdc2 activation, delays cell entrance to G2/M phase, and thereby inhibits taxol-induced apoptosis. In p21Cip1 antisense-transfected MDA-MB-435 cells or in p21−/− MEF cells, p185ErbB2 was unable to inhibit taxol-induced apoptosis. Therefore, p21Cip1 participates in the regulation of a G2/M checkpoint that contributes to resistance to taxol-induced apoptosis in p185ErbB2-overexpressing breast cancer cells. ^ Direct phosphorylation on Tyrosine-15 of p34Cdc2 by p185 ErbB2 receptor tyrosine kinase inhibits p34Cdc2 activation. The wild-type p185ErbB2 but not the kinase-defective mutant, when overexpressed in breast cancer cells, can phosphorylate p34Cdc2 on tyrosine (Tyr)15, an inhibitory phosphorylation site of p34 Cdc2. The kinase domain of the ErbB2 receptor was sufficient for binding to p34Cdc2 and directly phosphorylating the recombinant Cdc2. Phosphospecific Cdc2-Tyr15 immunoblot analyses, immunocomplex kinase assays, and phospho-amino acid analyses revealed that p185ErbB2 specifically phosphorylates Cdc2 on Tyr15. Phosphorylation of Cdc2-Tyr15 by ErbB2 is modulated during cell cycle and corresponded with delayed cell entry into G2/M phase. The kinase-defective p185ErbB2, which incapable of phosphorylating Cdc2-Tyr15, failed to inhibit taxol-induced activation and apoptosis, whereas the wild-type and the constitutive-active p185ErbB2 did. Increased Cdc2-Tyr15 phosphorylation was found in Erb132-overexpressing tumors from breast cancer patients. Thus, direct phosphorylation of Cdc2-Tyr15 by p185 ErbB2 RTK in breast cancer cells inhibits taxol-induced p34 Cdc2 activation and apoptosis, thereby conferring taxol resistance. ^
Resumo:
Approximately 33% of clinical breast carcinomas require estrogens to proliferate. Epidemiological data show that insulin resistance and diabetes mellitus is 2–3 times more prevalent in women with breast cancer than those with benign breast lesions, suggesting a clinical link between insulin and estradiol. Insulin and estradiol have a synergistic effect on the growth of MCF7 breast cancer cells, and long-term estradiol treatment upregulates the expression of the key insulin signaling protein IRS-1. The goal of this study was to further define the mechanism(s) of cross-talk between insulin and estradiol in regulating the growth of breast cancer. Using MCF7 cells, acute treatment with insulin or estradiol alone was found to stimulate two activities associated with growth: Erk MAP kinase and PI 3-kinase. However, combined acute treatment had an antagonistic effect on both activities. Acute estradiol treatment inhibited the insulin-stimulated tyrosine phosphorylation of IRS-1 while increasing its serine phosphorylation; the serine phosphorylation was attenuated by the PI 3-kinase inhibitor wortmannin. The acute antagonism observed with combined estradiol and insulin are not consistent with the long-term synergistic effect on growth. In contrast, chronic estradiol treatment enhanced the insulin-sensitivity of breast cancer cells as measured by increases in total cellular insulin-stimulated tyrosine phosphorylation of IRS-1 and activation of PI 3-kinase. Estradiol stimulation of gene transcription was found to require PI 3-kinase activity but not MAP kinase activity. Insulin alone had no effect on ER transcriptional activity, but chronic treatment in combination with estradiol resulted in synergism of ER transcription. The synergistic effect of insulin and estradiol on MCF7 cell growth was also found to require PI 3-kinase but not MAP kinase activity. Therefore, chronic estradiol treatment increases insulin stimulation of PI 3-kinase, and PI 3-kinase is required for estradiol stimulation of gene transcription alone and in combined synergy with insulin. These data demonstrate that PI 3-kinase is the locus for the cross-talk between insulin and estradiol which results in enhanced breast cancer growth with long-term exposure to both hormones. This may have important clinical implications for women with high risk for breast cancer and/or diabetes mellitus. ^
Resumo:
Tissue transglutaminase (tTGase) is an enzyme that catalyzes the posttranslational modification of proteins via Ca2+-dependent cross-linking reactions. In this study, we extended our earlier observation that tTGase is highly expressed in MCF-7 human breast carcinoma cells selected for the multidrug resistance phenotype (MCF-7/DOX). To directly assess the involvement of tTGase in drug resistance, parental MCF-7 (MCF-7/WT) cells were transfected with cDNAs encoding either a catalytically active (wildtype) or inactive (mutant) tTGase protein. Expression of wildtype tTGase led to spontaneous apoptosis in MCF-7/WT cells, while the mutant tTGase was tolerated by the cells but did not confer resistance to doxorubicin. Analysis of calcium by a spectrofluorometric technique revealed that MCF-7/DOX cells exhibit a defective mechanism in intracellular calcium mobilization, which may play a role in preventing the in situ activation of tTGase and thus allowing the cells to grow despite expressing this enzyme. An elevation in intracellular calcium by treatment with the calcium ionophore A23187 induced rapid and substantial apoptosis in MCF-7/DOX cells as determined by morphological and biochemical criteria. Pretreatment of MCF-7/DOX cells with a tTGase-specific inhibitor (monodansylcadaverine) suppressed A12387-induced apoptosis, suggesting the possible involvement of tTGase-catalyzed protein cross-linking activity. A23187-induced apoptosis in MCF-7/DOX cells was further characterized by PARP cleavage and activation of downstream caspases (-3, -6, and -7). Another interesting aspect of tTGase/A23187-induced apoptosis in MCF-7/DOX cells was that these cells failed to show any prototypic changes associated with the mitochondrial (altered membrane potential, cytochrome c release, caspase-9 activation), receptor-induced (Bid cleavage), or endoplasmic reticulum-stressed (caspase-12 activation) apoptotic pathways. In summary, our data demonstrate that, despite being highly resistant to conventional chemotherapeutic drugs, MCF-7/DOX cells are highly sensitive to apoptosis induced by increased intracellular calcium. We conclude that tTGase does not play a direct role in doxorubicin resistance in MCF-7/DOX cells, but may play a role in enhancing the sensitivity of these cells to undergo apoptosis. ^
Resumo:
To ensure the success of systemic gene therapy, it is critical to enhance the tumor specificity and activity of the promoter. In the current study, we identified the breast cancer-specific activity of the topoisomerase IIα promoter. We further showed that cdk2 and cyclin A activate topoisomerase IIα promoter in a breast cancer-specific manner. An element containing an inverted CCAAT box (ICB) was shown to respond this signaling. When the ICB-harboring topoisomerase IIα minimal promoter was linked with an enhancer sequence from the cytomegalovirus immediate early gene promoter (CMV promoter), this composite promoter, CT90, exhibited activity comparable to or higher than the CMV promoter in breast cancer cells in vitro and in vivo, yet expresses much lower activity in normal cell lines and normal organs than the CMV promoter. A CT90-driven construct expressing BikDD, a potent pro-apoptotic gene, was shown to selectively kill breast cancer cells in vitro and to suppress mammary tumor development in an animal model of intravenously administrated, liposome-delivered gene therapy. Expression of BikDD was readily detectable in the tumors but not in the normal organs of CT90-BikDD-treated animals. Finally, we demonstrated that CT90-BikDD treatment potentially enhanced the sensitivity of breast cancer cells to chemotherapeutic agents, especially doxorubicin and taxol. The results indicate that liposomal CT90-BikDD is a novel and effective systemic breast cancer-targeting gene therapy, and its combination with chemotherapy may further improve the current adjuvant therapy for breast cancer. ^