| Literature DB >> 16353147 |
Kazuhiro Araki1, Takafumi Sangai, Shin'ichi Miyamoto, Hiroyuki Maeda, Shi-Chuan Zhang, Michio Nakamura, Genichiro Ishii, Takahiro Hasebe, Hideaki Kusaka, Tadakazu Akiyama, Yoshimi Tokuda, Kanji Nagai, Hironobu Minami, Atsushi Ochiai.
Abstract
Multiple myeloma (MM) is a fatal disease that affects plasma cells. Patients with MM have 1 or more osteolytic lesions in their bone tissues, where insulin-like growth factors (IGFs; IGF-I and IGF-II) are mainly stored. The role of bone-derived IGFs in the development of MM has not been extensively studied because reliable animal models are lacking. We established an animal model using a human MM cell line, RPMI8226, in nonobese diabetic/severe-combined immunodeficient (NOD/SCID) mice implanted with human adult bone (HAB) fragments. Treatment with an anti-human IGF-neutralizing monoclonal antibody, KM1468, inhibited the IGF-I-stimulated phosphorylation of type-I IGF receptors (IGF-IR) in RPMI8226 cells and the activation of the downstream PI3-K/Akt signaling pathway in vitro. KM1468 inhibited IGF-I-mediated RPMI8226 cell growth in a dose-dependent manner. In the NOD/SCID-HAB model, treatment with KM1468 significantly inhibited the growth of RPMI8226 cells (p<0.02). These results indicated that the growth of MM cells was predominantly stimulated not by serum-derived IGFs, but by bone-derived IGFs. Furthermore, the targeting of bone-derived IGFs, using a neutralizing antibody, may offer a new therapeutic strategy for MM. Copyright (c) 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2006 PMID: 16353147 DOI: 10.1002/ijc.21653
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Cancer ISSN: 0020-7136 Impact factor: 7.396