966 resultados para CARCINOMA CELLS


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Die dieser Arbeit zugrundeliegenden Nanopartikel wurden mittels der Makromonomer-Strategie aus polymerisierbaren Polystyrol-b-Poly(2-vinylpyridin) Oligomeren dargestellt. Die Bürstenpolymere besitzen eine polare PS-Schale und einen polaren Kern (P2VP), dessen Polarität durch Quaternisierung deutlich erhöht werden kann. Die Bürstenpolymere weisen bei Molmassen um 400 - 800 kg/mol einen Teilchendurchmesser von ca. 15 - 20 nm auf. Die Nanopartikel eignen sich dazu, hydrophile Farbstoffe in unpolaren Lösungsmitteln zu solubilisieren. Durch spektroskopische Untersuchungen wurden in Abhängigkeit der chemischen Struktur und der Bürstenpolymere Beladungsgrade von über 1 g Farbstoff pro Gramm Polymer ermittelt. Die Beladung der Nanopartikel folgt hierbei einer nichttrivialen Kinetik, was möglicherweise durch eine wasserinduzierte Überstrukturbildung während der Beladung bedingt ist. Mittels isothermer Titrationskalorimetrie konnten die Wechselwirkungen zwischen polymeren Substrat und niedermolekularen Liganden genauer charakterisiert werden. Teilweise werden hierbei zweistufige Titrationsverläufe und "überstöchiometrische" Beladung der Bürstenpolymere beobachtet. Den Hauptbeitrag zur Wechselwirkung liefert hierbei die exotherme Wechselwirkung zwischen basischen Polymer und saurem Farbstoff. Die hohe Farbstoffbeladung führt zur deutlichen Vergrößerung der einzelnen Nanopartikel, was sowohl in Lösung durch Lichtstreu-Techniken als auch auf Oberflächen mit Hilfe des AFM zu beobachten ist. Durch Untersuchungen mit der analytischen Ultrazentrifuge konnte nachgewiesen werden, dass sich der eingelagerte Farbstoff in einem Polaritäts-abhängigen Gleichgewicht mit der Umgebung steht, er somit auch wieder aus den Nanopartikeln freigesetzt werden kann. Darüberhinaus wurden im Rahmen der Arbeit erste Erfolge bei der Synthese von wasserlöslichen Nanopartikeln mit Poly(2-vinylpyridin)-Kern erzielt. Als hierfür geeignet stellte sich eine Synthesestrategie heraus, bei der zunächst ein Bürstenpolymer mit P2VP-Seitenketten dargestellt und dieses anschließend mit geeignet funktionalisierten Polyethylenoxid-Ketten zum Kern-Schale Teilchen umgesetzt wurde. Neben Untersuchungen zum Mizellisierungsverhalten von PEO-b-P2VP Makromonomeren wurden deren Aggregate in Wasser hinsichtlich ihrer Zelltoxizität durch in-vitro Experimente an C26-Mäusekarzinom-Zellen charakterisiert. Die extrem geringe Toxizität macht das PEO-P2VP System zu einem potentiellen Kandidaten für drug-delivery Anwendungen. Besonders die pH-abhängige Löslichkeitsänderung des Poly(2-vinylpyridin) erscheint hierbei besonders interessant.

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Die Bildung von Metastasen und Rezidiven stellt ein großes Problem für eine erfolgreiche Therapie solider maligner Tumoren dar. Dabei ist die Rolle der angewendeten Therapiever-fahren in der Induktion metastasierender Zellen vor allem für eine Schwerionentherapie noch weitestgehend unklar. Die für die Metastasierung entscheidende Tumorzellmigration wurde daher unter dem Einfluss von Röntgen- und Schwerionenstrahlung untersuchen. Dazu wurden drei humane Tumorzelllinien (Gliomzelllinie U87 und kolorektale Zelllinien HCT116 und HCT116 p21-/-) unter standardisierten Bedingungen in einer Boydenkammer direkt und 24 Stunden nach Bestrahlung in vitro auf ihr Migrationsverhalten untersucht. Um mögliche Än-derungen migrationsrelevanter Proteine zu bestimmen, wurden zu denselben Zeitpunkten Zelllysate hergestellt und die Expression der Integrine b1 und b3 sowie der Proteinkinase B Isoformen Akt1 und Akt2 und deren Phosphorylierung untersucht. Gezeigt werden konnten sowohl zelllinien- als auch strahlenspezifische Unterschiede in der Migration und der Proteinexpressionen. Dabei konnten die beobachteten Migrationsänderungen nur zum Teil (vor allem nach Röntgenbestrahlung) durch die veränderte Expressionen der untersuchten Proteine erklärt werden. Daher ist zu vermuten, dass den strahleninduzierten Veränderungen der Migration der verwendeten Zelllinien verschiedene Mechanis-men zugrunde liegen, die auf der Expression unterschiedlicher Proteine beruhen. Bestrahlungen mit 12C-Ionen scheinen prinzipiell andere Expressionsmuster zu induzieren als konventionelle Strahlung und die hier untersuchten Proteine in der Migration der Zellen daher nur eine untergeordnete Rolle zu spielen. Auffällig waren die deutlich zelllinienspezifischen Unterschiede in der Migration nach Röntgenbestrahlung. Dort wurde ein zum Teil erhöhtes Migrationspotential nach klinisch relevanten Bestrahlungsdosen von U87 Gliomzellen festgestellt. Die Migrationsaktivität von kolorektalen Zelllinien hingegen nahm nach Bestrahlung ab. Nach Schwerionenbestrahlung wurden für alle Zelllinien signifikante Abnahmen der Migration festgestellt. Die hier erhaltenen Ergebnisse können aufgrund einer Vielzahl pro- und antimigratorischer Signale im Tumorgewebe nicht direkt in die in vivo Situation übertragen werden, doch können sie durchaus als Hinweise für die Abschätzung eines veränderten Metastasierungsrisikos dienen. Für kolorektale Zellen, unabhängig von ihrem p21-Status scheint eine Behandlung mit Röntgenstrahlen eher nicht mit einem erhöhten Migrationsrisiko einherzugehen. Anders ist dies bei den hier untersuchten Gliomzellen U87. Hier kann ein strahleninduziertes Metastasierungsrisiko aufgrund der erzielten Ergebnisse keinesfalls ausgeschlossen werden. Aus dieser Sicht scheint eine Behandlung von Gliomen mit 12C-Ionen vorteilhafter, da eine sehr gute reproduzierbare strahlenvermittelte Migrationshemmung beobachtet wurde.

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Exposition von Endothelzellen mit ionisierender Strahlung (IR) oder Behandlung mit inflammatorischen Zytokinen (z. B. TNFa) induziert über eine Rho-GTPasen abhängige NF-kB-Aktivierung die Expression verschiedener Zelladhäsionsmoleküle, u. a. auch von E-Selektin. E-Selektin vermittelt die Adhäsion von Tumorzellen (TC) an Endothelzellen und ist daher vermutlich an der Extravasation von zirkulierenden Tumorzellen beteiligt. HMG-CoA-Reduktase-Inhibitoren (Statine), welche eine breite klinische Anwendung als Lipidsenker erfahren, sind in der Lage, Rho-GTPasen und die durch sie vermittelten Signalwege zu hemmen. Daher sollten Statine wie Lovastatin auch Zell-Zell-Adhäsionsvorgänge beeinflussen. Die vorliegende Arbeit widmet sich den Mechanismen, mit denen IR und TNF in Endothel- und/oder Tumorzellen pro-adhäsive Faktoren induzieren können und ob diese Effekte durch Lovastatin beeinflussbar sind. Zu diesem Zweck wurde mittels eines ELISA-basierenden Zelladhäsions-Assays die Auswirkung von IR und TNF auf Zell-Zell-Kontakte zwischen humanen Tumorzellen (u. a. Kolonkarzinomzellen (HT29)) und humanen, venösen Nabelschnurendothelzellen (HUVEC) analysiert. Zudem wurden die Effekte einer Lovastatinvorbehandlung von TC und/oder HUVEC auf TC-HUVEC-Adhäsion untersucht. Des Weiteren wurden die Wirkungen des sLex-Mimetikums Glycyrrhizin und des Rac1-spezifischen „small-molecule“ Inhibitors NSC23766 auf TC-HUVEC-Adhäsion überprüft. Zusätzlich wurde die strahleninduzierbare mRNA-Expression von diversen Zelladhäsionsmolekülen, Metastasierungsfaktoren und DNA-Reparatur-Genen mittels qRT-PCR (Real-Time Analysen) quantitativ erfasst. Um die erhaltenen in vitro Ergebnisse auch in vivo zu bestätigen, untersuchten wir den Effekt einer Ganzkörperbestrahlung (TBI) von BALB/c-Mäusen auf die Expression von pro-adhäsiven Faktoren. Zur Analyse der Tumorzell-Extravasation wurden Tumorzellen in die laterale Schwanzvene immundefizienter Mäuse injiziert und anschließend eine Ganzkörperbestrahlung durchgeführt (4 Gy). Nach einer Wartezeit von 4 Wochen wurde ein erhöhtes Auftreten von Lungenmetastasen beobachtet, welches durch Vorbehandlung der Tiere mit Statinen, NSC23766 oder Glycyrrhizin blockiert werden konnte. Zusammenfassend konnte somit ein Einfluss von IR auf die Expression verschiedener Zelladhäsionsmoleküle in vitro und auf die Extravasation zirkulierender Tumorzellen in vivo festgestellt werden. Diese pro-metastatischen Strahleneffekte konnten durch pharmakologische Hemmung Rho-regulierter Signalwege abgeschwächt werden.

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Der Grund für die schlechte Prognose beim Nierenzellkarzinom (NZK) stellt nicht der Primärtumor dar sondern ist vielmehr der häufigen Ausbildung von Fernmetastasen geschuldet. Etwa 30 % aller Patienten mit fortgeschrittenem NZK bilden dabei Metastasen in den Knochen aus. Das Knochenmilieu scheint, aufgrund der hohen Frequenz der knochenspezifischen Metastasierung, einen idealen Wachstumslokus für die Nierenkarzinomzellen dazustellen und rückte in der jüngsten Vergangenheit in den Fokus der Forschung. Dabei konnte der Calcium-sensitive Rezeptor (CaSR), der im gesunden Gewebe die Konzentration der extrazellulären Calcium-Ionen reguliert und besonders in der Niere von Bedeutung ist, mit der Metastasierung in die Knochen in Zusammenhang gebracht werden. Die Knochen stellen im Körper das Organ mit der höchsten Calcium-Konzentration dar. Durch ständigen Knochenmetabolismus werden Calcium-Ionen freigesetzt, welche CaSR-exprimierende Zellen aktivieren können. Aus diesem Grund wurden im Zusammenhang mit dieser Arbeit Nierenkarzinomzellen (786 O) sowie gesunde Nierenzellen (HEK 293) mit dem Gen des CaSR transfiziert und anschließend unter dem Einfluss von Calcium (10 mM – 30 Min.), einem CaSR-Aktivator (Cinacalcet (10 µM – 1 Std.)), sowie einem CaSR-Inhibitor (NPS2143 (10 µM – 1 Std.)) auf Unterschiede im zellulären Verhalten hin untersucht.rnBereits ohne Calcium-Behandlung zeigten die CaSR-transfizierten 786 O-Zellen ein gesteigertes Migrationsverhalten (durchgeführt in einer Boyden Kammer, Fibronektin als Chemotaxin) und ein erhöhtes Adhäsionspotential (zum einen an Kompo¬nenten der EZM (Fibronektin und Kollagen I) und zum anderen an HUVEC). Bei den CaSR-transfizierten HEK 293-Zellen wurde nur die Migration positiv beeinflusst. Nach einer 30-minütigen Behandlung mit Calcium zeigten die CaSR-transfizierten 786 O-Zellen eine starke Zunahme des Adhäsions- und Proli¬ferations-verhaltens, sowie eine verstärkte Migration bei Verwendung von Calcium als Chemotaxin. CaSR-transfizierte HEK 293-Zellen hingegen zeigten keine Migration und nach Calcium-Behandlung nur geringfügige Änderungen in Adhäsion und Proliferation. Konsistent mit diesen Ergebnissen war die Auswertung der intrazellulären Signalwege mit Hilfe von Western Blot-Analysen. In CaSR-expri-mierenden 786 O-Zellen waren die Signalwege AKT, ERK, JNK und p38α nach Calcium-Behandlung deutlich erhöht. In den HEK 293-Zellen kam es zu einer Zunahme der Proteinmenge aktivierter ERK-, JNK-, Paxillin- und SHC-Moleküle. Mit Hilfe einer Kombinationsbehandlung aus NPS2143 und Calcium konnte der Calcium-bedingte Effekt in durchweg allen Untersuchungen wieder bis auf das Kontrollniveau gesenkt werden. Die Verwendung von Cinacalcet und Calcium führte zwar erneut zu deutlichen Steigerungen der zellulären Vorgänge, lag aber immer unter dem Calcium-abhängigen Maximum.rnDurch die Simulation der Vorgänge, die während einer Metastasierung ablaufen, konnte gezeigt werden, dass der CaSR in Nierenkarzinomzellen die Knochen-metastasierung induziert. Sollten sich diese Zusammenhänge in vivo im Mausmodell bestätigen, könnte der CaSR zukünftig als Marker für eine Früherkennung von Knochenmetastasen fungieren. Zudem könnten indivi¬dual¬isierte Therapieansätze entwickelt werden, die knochenmetastasierende Zellen bereits vor Metastasierung effizient bekämpfen können.rn

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Sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) regulates a broad spectrum of fundamental cellular processes like proliferation, death, migration and cytokine production. Therefore, elevated levels of S1P may be causal to various pathologic conditions including cancer, fibrosis, inflammation, autoimmune diseases and aberrant angiogenesis. Here we report that S1P lyase from the prokaryote Symbiobacterium thermophilum (StSPL) degrades extracellular S1P in vitro and in blood. Moreover, we investigated its effect on cellular responses typical of fibrosis, cancer and aberrant angiogenesis using renal mesangial cells, endothelial cells, breast (MCF-7) and colon (HCT 116) carcinoma cells as disease models. In all cell types, wild-type StSPL, but not an inactive mutant, disrupted MAPK phosphorylation stimulated by exogenous S1P. Functionally, disruption of S1P receptor signaling by S1P depletion inhibited proliferation and expression of connective tissue growth factor in mesangial cells, proliferation, migration and VEGF expression in carcinoma cells, and proliferation and migration of endothelial cells. Upon intravenous injection of StSPL in mice, plasma S1P levels rapidly declined by 70% within 1 h and then recovered to normal 6 h after injection. Using the chicken chorioallantoic membrane model we further demonstrate that also under in vivo conditions StSPL, but not the inactive mutant, inhibited tumor cell-induced angiogenesis as an S1P-dependent process. Our data demonstrate that recombinant StSPL is active under extracellular conditions and holds promise as a new enzyme therapeutic for diseases associated with increased levels of S1P and S1P receptor signaling.

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Previous studies could demonstrate, that the naturally occuring polyphenol resveratrol inhibits cell growth of colon carcinoma cells at least in part by inhibition of protooncogene ornithine decarboxylase (ODC). The objective of this study was to provide several lines of evidence suggesting that the induction of ceramide synthesis is involved in this regulatory mechanisms. Cell growth was determined by BrdU incorporation and crystal violet staining. Ceramide concentrations were detected by HPLC-coupled mass-spectrometry. Protein levels were examined by Western blot analysis. ODC activity was assayed radiometrically measuring [(14)CO(2)]-liberation. A dominant-negative PPARgamma mutant was transfected in Caco-2 cells to suppress PPARgamma-mediated functions. Antiproliferative effects of resveratrol closely correlate with a dose-dependent increase of endogenous ceramides (p<0.001). Compared to controls the cell-permeable ceramide analogues C2- and C6-ceramide significantly inhibit ODC-activity (p<0.001) in colorectal cancer cells. C6-ceramide further diminished protein levels of protooncogenes c-myc (p<0.05) and ODC (p<0.01), which is strictly related to the ability of ceramides to inhibit cell growth in a time- and dose-dependent manner. These results were further confirmed using inhibitors of sphingolipid metabolism, where only co-incubation with a serine palmitoyltransferase (SPT) inhibitor could significantly counteract resveratrol-mediated actions. These data suggest that the induction of ceramide de novo biosynthesis but not hydrolysis of sphingomyelin is involved in resveratrol-mediated inhibition of ODC. In contrast to the regulation of catabolic spermidine/spermine acetyltransferase by resveratrol, inhibitory effects on ODC occur PPARgamma-independently, indicating independent pathways of resveratrol-action. Due to our findings resveratrol could show great chemopreventive and therapeutic potential in the treatment of colorectal cancers.

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Deregulated activation of the Src tyrosine kinase and heightened Id1 expression are independent mediators of aggressive tumor biology. The present report implicates Src signaling as a critical regulator of Id1 gene expression. Microarray analyses showed that Id family genes were among the most highly down-regulated by incubation of A549 lung carcinoma cells with the small-molecule Src inhibitor AZD0530. Id1 transcript and protein levels were potently reduced in a dose-dependent manner concomitantly with the reduction of activated Src levels. These effects were conserved across a panel of lung, breast, prostate, and colon cancer cell lines and confirmed by the ability of PP2, Src siRNA, and Src-blocking peptides to suppress Id1 expression. PP2, AZD0530, and dominant-negative Src abrogated Id1 promoter activity, which was induced by constitutively active Src. The Src-responsive region of the Id1 promoter was mapped to a region 1,199 to 1,360 bps upstream of the translation start site and contained a Smad-binding element. Src was also required for bone morphogenetic protein-2 (BMP-2)-induced Id1 expression and promoter activity, was moderately activated by BMP-2, and complexed with Smad1/5. Conversely, Src inhibitors blocked Smad1/5 nuclear translocation and binding to the Src-responsive region of the Id1 promoter. Consistent with a role for Src and Id1 in cancer cell invasion, Src inhibitors and Id1 siRNA decreased cancer cell invasion, which was increased by Id1 overexpression. Taken together, these results reveal that Src positively interacts with the BMP-Smad-Id pathway and provide new ways for targeted inhibition of Id1.

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Tenascins represent a family of extracellular matrix glycoproteins with distinctive expression patterns. Here we have analyzed the most recently described member, tenascin-W, in breast cancer. Mammary tumors isolated from transgenic mice expressing hormone-induced oncogenes reveal tenascin-W in the stroma around lesions with a high likelihood of metastasis. The presence of tenascin-W was correlated with the expression of its putative receptor, alpha8 integrin. HC11 cells derived from normal mammary epithelium do not express alpha8 integrin and fail to cross tenascin-W-coated filters. However, 4T1 mammary carcinoma cells do express alpha8 integrin and their migration is stimulated by tenascin-W. The expression of tenascin-W is induced by BMP-2 but not by TGF-beta1, though the latter is a potent inducer of tenascin-C. The expression of tenascin-W is dependent on p38MAPK and JNK signaling pathways. Since preinflammatory cytokines also act through p38MAPK and JNK signaling pathways, the possible role of TNF-alpha in tenascin-W expression was also examined. TNF-alpha induced the expression of both tenascin-W and tenascin-C, and this induction was p38MAPK- and cyclooxygenase-dependent. Our results show that tenascin-W may be a useful diagnostic marker for breast malignancies, and that the induction of tenascin-W in the tumor stroma may contribute to the invasive behavior of tumor cells.

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Sustained growth of solid tumours can rely on both the formation of new and the co-option of existing blood vessels. Current models suggest that binding of angiopoietin-2 (Ang-2) to its endothelial Tie2 receptor prevents receptor phosphorylation, destabilizes blood vessels, and promotes vascular permeability. In contrast, binding of angiopoietin-1 (Ang-1) induces Tie2 receptor activation and supports the formation of mature blood vessels covered by pericytes. Despite the intense research to decipher the role of angiopoietins during physiological neovascularization and tumour angiogenesis, a mechanistic understanding of angiopoietin function on vascular integrity and remodelling is still incomplete. We therefore assessed the vascular morphology of two mouse mammary carcinoma xenotransplants (M6378 and M6363) which differ in their natural angiopoietin expression. M6378 displayed Ang-1 in tumour cells but no Ang-2 in tumour endothelial cells in vivo. In contrast, M6363 tumours expressed Ang-2 in the tumour vasculature, whereas no Ang-1 expression was present in tumour cells. We stably transfected M6378 mouse mammary carcinoma cells with human Ang-1 or Ang-2 and investigated the consequences on the host vasculature, including ultrastructural morphology. Interestingly, M6378/Ang-2 and M6363 tumours displayed a similar vascular morphology, with intratumoural haemorrhage and non-functional and abnormal blood vessels. Pericyte loss was prominent in these tumours and was accompanied by increased endothelial cell apoptosis. Thus, overexpression of Ang-2 converted the vascular phenotype of M6378 tumours into a phenotype similar to M6363 tumours. Our results support the hypothesis that Ang-1/Tie2 signalling is essential for vessel stabilization and endothelial cell/pericyte interaction, and suggest that Ang-2 is able to induce a switch of vascular phenotypes within tumours.

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Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) is a cell membrane tyrosine kinase receptor and plays a pivotal role in regulating cell growth, differentiation, cell cycle, and tumorigenesis. Deregulation of EGFR causes many diseases including cancers. Intensive investigation of EGFR alteration in human cancers has led to profound progress in developing drugs to target EGFR-mediated cancers. While exploring possible synergistic enhancement of therapeutic efficacy by combining EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI) with other anti-cancer agents, we observed that suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid (SAHA, a deacetylase inhibitor) enhanced TKI-induced cancer cell death, which further led us to question whether SAHA-mediated sensitization to TKI was associated with EGFR acetylation. What we know so far is that SAHA can inhibit class I and II histone deacetylases (HDACs), which could possibly preserve acetylation of underlying HDAC-targeted proteins including both histone and non-histone proteins. In addition, it has been reported that an HDAC inhibitor, TSA, enhanced EGFR phosphorylation in ovarian cancer cells. EGFR acetylation has also been reported to play a role in the regulation of EGFR endocytosis recently. These observations indicate that there might be an intrinsic correlation between acetylation and phosphorylation of EGFR. In other words, the interplay between EGFR acetylation and phosphorylation may contribute to HDAC inhibitors (HDACi)-augmented EGFR phosphorylation. In this investigation, we showed that CBP acetyltransferase acetylated EGFR in vivo. In response to EGF stimulation, CBP rapidly translocated from the nucleus to the cytoplasm. We also demonstrated protein-protein interaction between CBP and EGFR as well as the enhancement of EGFR acetylation by CBP. Moreover, EGFR acetylation enhanced EGFR tyrosine phosphorylation and augmented its association with Src kinase. Acetylation-deficient EGFR mutant (EGFR-K3R) significantly reduced the function and activity of EGFR. Furthermore, ectopic expression of EGFR-K3R mutant abrogated its ability to respond to EGF-induced cell proliferation, DNA synthesis, and anchorage-independent growth using cell-based assays and tumor growth in nude mice. In addition, we demonstrated that EGFR expression was associated with SAHA resistance in the treatment of cancer cells that overexpress EGFR. The knockdown of EGFR in MDA-MB-468 breast cancer cells could sensitize the cells to respond to SAHA. The overexpression of EGFR in SAHA-sensitive MDA-MB-453 breast cancer cells rendered the cells resistant to SAHA. Together, these findings suggest that EGFR plays an important role in SAHA resistance in breast carcinoma cells that we tested. The combination therapy of HDACi with TKI has been proposed for treating cancers with aberrant expression of EGFR. The evidence from pre-clinical or clinical trials demonstrated significant enhancement of therapeutic efficacy by using such a combination therapy. Our in vivo study also demonstrated that the combination of SAHA and TKI for the treatment of breast cancer significantly reduced tumor burden compared with either SAHA or TKI alone. The significance of our study elucidated another possible underlying molecular mechanism by which HDACi mediated sensitization to TKI. Our results unveiled a critical role of EGFR acetylation that regulates EGFR tyrosine phosphorylation and may further provide an experiment-based rationale for combinatorial targeted therapy.

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Ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM) is a critical component of the cellular response to DNA damage, where it acts as a damage sensor, and signals to a large network of proteins which execute the important tasks involved in responding to the damage, namely inducing cell cycle checkpoints, inducing DNA repair, modulating transcriptional responses, and regulating cell death pathways if the damage cannot be repaired faithfully. We have now discovered that an additional novel component of this ATM-dependent damage response involves induction of autophagy in response to oxidative stress. In contrast to DNA damage-induced ATM activation however, oxidative stress induced ATM, occurs in the cytoplasm, and does not require nuclear-to-cytoplasmic shuttling of ATM. Using several cell culture systems including MCF7 breast carcinoma cells, SKOV3 ovarian cancer cells, and various lineages of mouse embryonic fibroblasts, we showed that once activated by reactive oxygen species (ROS), ATM signals to mTORC1 to induce autophagy via the LKB1-AMPK-TSC2 pathway. Targeting dysregulation of mTORC1 in Atm-deficient mice, which succumb to lymphomagenesis within 3-4 months of age with daily administration of rapamycin, could significantly extend survival and cause regression of tumors, suggesting that pharmacologically targeting this pathway has therapeutic implications in cancer. We also identified a second contrasting pathway for DNA damage-induced mTORC1 repression which does not require AMPK activation, but does require ATM and TSC2. Several potential mechanisms including mTOR localization and p53-mediated pathways were ruled out however we identified that TSC2 may be an additional cytoplasmic direct ATM substrate that is engaged in response to DNA damage specifically. Lastly, a study was performed to examine whether autophagy induced by ovarian cancer therapeutics (focusing on cisplatin, since paclitaxel does not induce autophagy in the SKOV3 cell line model we used) plays a role in resistance to therapy since autophagy can play both pro-survival mechanisms or be a mechanism of cell death. Using a genetic approach to knock-down Atg5 expression with shRNA in SKOV3 ovarian carcinoma cells, we compared the cytotoxicity of cisplatin in vector or Atg5 knock-down cells, and demonstrated that autophagy does not play any significant role in the response to cisplatin in this cell line.

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The molecular mechanisms that mediate endometrial cancer invasion and metastasis remain poorly understood. This is a significant clinical problem, as there is no definitive cure for metastatic disease. The purinergic pathway’s generation of adenosine and its activation of the adenosine receptor A2B (A2BR) induces cell-cell adhesion to promote barrier function. This barrier function is known to be important in maintaining homeostasis during hypoxia, trauma, and sepsis. Loss of this epithelial barrier function provides a considerable advantage for carcinoma progression, as loss of cell-cell adhesions supports proliferation, aberrant signaling, epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition, invasion, and metastasis. The present work provides strong evidence that CD73-generated adenosine actively promotes cell-cell adhesion in carcinoma cells by filopodia-induced zippering. Adenosine-generating ecto-enzyme, CD73, was down-regulated in moderately- and poorly-differentiated, invasive, and metastatic endometrial carcinomas. CD73 expression and enzyme activity in normal endometrium and endometrial carcinomas was significantly correlated to the epithelial phenotype. Barrier function in normal epithelial cells of the endometrium was dependent on stress-induced generation of adenosine by CD73 and adenosine’s activation of A2BR. This same mechanism inhibited endometrial carcinoma cell migration and invasion. Finally, adenosine’s activation of A2BR induced the formation of filopodia that promoted the re-forming of cell-cell adhesions in carcinoma cells. Overall, these studies identified purinergic pathway-induced filopodia to be a novel mechanism of adenosine’s barrier function and a mechanism that has to be avoided/down-regulated by endometrial carcinoma cells attempting to lose attachment with their neighboring cells. These results provide insight into the molecular mechanisms of endometrial cancer invasion. In addition, because loss of cell-cell adhesions has been closely linked to therapy resistance in cancer, these results provide a rational clinical strategy for the re-establishment of cell-cell adhesions to potentially increase therapeutic sensitivity. In contrast to other molecular mechanisms regulating cell-cell adhesions, the purinergic pathway is clinically druggable, with agonists and antagonists currently being tested in clinical trials of various diseases.

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$\beta$1,4-Galactosyltransferase (GalTase) is unusual among the glycosyltransferases in that it is found in two subcellular compartments where it performs different functions. In the trans-Golgi complex, GalTase participates in oligosaccharide biosynthesis as do other glycosyltransferases. GalTase is also found on the cell surface, where it associates with the cytoskeleton and functions as a receptor for extracellular oligosaccharide ligands. Although we know much regarding GalTase function on the cell surface, little is known about the mechanisms underlying its transport to the plasma membrane. Cloning of the GalTase gene revealed that there are two GalTase proteins (i.e., long and short) with different size cytoplasmic tails. This raises the possibility that differences in the cytoplasmic domain of GalTase may influence its subcellular distribution. The object of this study was to examine this hypothesis directly through the use of molecular, immunological, and biochemical approaches.^ To examine whether the two GalTase proteins are targeted to different subcellular compartments, F9 embryonal carcinoma cells were transfected with either long or short GalTase cDNAs and intracellular and cell surface enzyme levels measured. Cell surface GalTase activity was enriched in cells overexpressing the long, but not the form of short GalTase. Furthermore, a dominant negative mutation in cell surface GalTase was created by transfecting cells with GalTase cDNAs encoding a truncated version of long GalTase devoid of the extracellular catalytic domain. Overexpressing the complete cytoplasmic and transmembrane domains of long GalTase led to a loss of GalTase-dependent cellular adhesion by specifically displacing surface GalTase from its cytoskeletal associations. In contrast, overexpressing the analogous truncated protein of short GalTase had no effect on cell adhesion. Finally, chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) reporter proteins were used to determine directly whether the cytoplasmic domains of long and short GalTase were responsible for differential subcellular distribution. The cytoplasmic and transmembrane domains of long GalTase led to CAT expression on the ceil surface and its association with the detergent-insoluble cytoskeleton; the analogous fusion protein containing short GalTase was restricted to the Golgi compartment. These results suggest that the cytoplasmic domain unique to long GalTase is responsible for targeting a portion of this protein to the cell surface and associating it with the cytoskeleton, enabling it to function as a cell adhesion molecule. ^

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OPN is a secreted phosphate containing protein which is expressed by osteoblasts and a variety of other cells in vivo. Data from in vitro studies has accumulated which relates OPN to cellular transformation. We hypothesize that OPN expression is associated with neoplastic disease in humans as suggested by cell culture models. The overall objective of the current study was to determine the tissue distribution of OPN in human malignancy and to determine whether or not a correlation exists between OPN serum levels and malignancy. At the inception of this project, no study had been made demonstrating the relevance of OPN expression with naturally occurring neoplastic disease in humans. To date, few studies have reported OPN distribution in human neoplasia and are limited by either the number of specimens analyzed or the technique used in analysis. In this dissertation study, OPN was purified from human milk and $\alpha$-OPN antiserum developed and characterized. Following antibody development, the distribution and prevalence of OPN in human oral squamous cell carcinoma and human prostate carcinoma was evaluated using immunohistochemical localization. OPN immunolocalization was found in a high percentage of oral epithelial dysplasia and oral squamous cell carcinoma in humans. One oral squamous cell carcinoma cells line, UMSCC-1, was found to express OPN mRNA using Northern blotting. OPN localized to a high percentage of primary prostate adenocarcinomas. OPN localized to 52% of androgen dependent cases and 100% of androgen independent cases. Androgen dependent cell lines such as LNCap and NbE showed minimal OPN mRNA expression while the androgen independent lines C4-2 and PC3 produced ample OPN mRNA. An OPN sandwich assay was developed and used to determine the serum level of OPN in normal males, patients with BPH (benign prostate hypertrophy), and patients with prostate carcinoma. No statistically significant difference was found in OPN serum levels among the three groups. However, a trend of increasing OPN in the serum was noted in patients with BPH and prostate cancer. ^

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The purpose of these studies was to investigate the role of interferon-beta (IFN-$\beta$) in angiogenesis. IFN-$\alpha/\beta$ have been implicated in inhibiting a number of steps in the angiogenic pathway. We examined the balance of angiogenesis-regulating molecules in several systems including human infantile hemangiomas, UV-B irradiated mice, and dorsal incisional wound healing in mice. In each system, epidermal hyperplasia and cutaneous angiogenesis were directly related to the expression of positive angiogenic factors (bFGF and VEGF) and inversely related to the expression of endogenous IFN-$\beta.$ The re-expression of IFN-$\beta$ correlated with tumor regression and/or resolution of wound healing. In contrast to control mice, UV-B-induced cutaneous angiogenesis and hyperplasia persisted in IFN-$\alpha/\beta$ receptor knock-out mice. In normal mice, endogenous IFN-$\beta$ was expressed by all differentiated epithelial cells exposed to environmental stimuli. The expression of endogenous IFN-$\beta$ was necessary but insufficient for complete differentiation of epidermal keratinocytes.^ The tumor organ microenvironment can regulate angiogenesis. Human bladder carcinoma cells growing in the bladder wall of nude mice express high levels of bFGF, VEGF, and MMP-9, have higher vascular densities, and produce metastases to lymph nodes and lungs, whereas the same cells growing subcutaneously express less bFGF, VEGF, and MMP-9, have lower vascular densities, and do not metastasize. IFN-$\alpha/\beta$ was found to inhibit bFGF and MMP-9 expression both in vitro and in vivo in human bladder carcinoma cells. Systemic therapy with human IFN-$\alpha$ of human bladder cancer cells growing orthotopically in nude mice, resulted in decreased vascularity, tumorigenicity, and metastasis as compared to saline treated mice. Human bladder cancer cells resistant to the antiproliferative effects of IFN were transfected with the human IFN-$\beta$ gene. Hu-IFN-$\beta$ transfected cells expressed significantly less bFGF protein and gelatinase activity than parental or control-transfected cells and did not grow at ectopic or orthotopic sites. Collectively the data provide direct evidence that IFN-$\alpha/\beta$ can inhibit angiogenesis via down-regulation of angiogenesis-stimulating cytokines. ^