| Literature DB >> 19240712 |
E Marangoni1, N Lecomte, L Durand, G de Pinieux, D Decaudin, C Chomienne, F Smadja-Joffe, M-F Poupon.
Abstract
CD44 is a marker of tumour-initiating cells and is upregulated in invasive breast carcinoma; however, its role in the cancer progression is unknown. Here, we show that antibody-mediated CD44-targeting in human breast cancer xenografts (HBCx) significantly reduces tumour growth and that this effect is associated to induction of growth-inhibiting factors. Moreover, treatment with this antibody prevents tumour relapse after chemotherapy-induced remission in a basal-like HBCx.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19240712 PMCID: PMC2661796 DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6604953
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Figure 1CD44 expression in human breast cancer xenografts (HBCx) and effects of P245 anti-human CD44 mAb on HBCx growth. (A) Flow cytometry assay of CD44+ cells in HBCx-8 and HBCx-3 xenografts. (B) Immunohistology of HBCx stained with biotin-conjugated Hermes-3 anti-human specific CD44 antibody. Haematoxylin/Eosin sections × 200. Upper: Untreated HBCx-8; a single strongly positive CD44+ cancer cell (arrow) isolated among CD44− cancer cells (left): membrane staining is seen, with a heterogeneous pattern. Untreated HBCx-8 tumour; a gradient of staining is observed from the periphery to the central areas (right). Untreated HBCx-3 tumour; strong staining of surviving clumps of cells (arrows), within necrotic areas in the centre of the tumour. Middle: Untreated HBCx-3 showing low staining of CD44+ cells in the periphery of the tumour. Bottom: HBCx-3 after treatment showing residual CD44+ cells. (C) Anti-tumoural effects of P245 mAb on tumour growth. Growth curves; relative tumour volume (RTV) of HBCx-8 (upper) and HBCx-3 (bottom) as a function of time (days after start of treatment), IgG1 isotype control (black squares) or P245-treated (white squares) with P245 mAb. Mice bearing HBCx-3 and HBCx-8 tumours, at a mean volume of 100 mm3, were randomized into treatment and control groups (8 to 12 mice per group). The P245 mAb was injected intraperitoneally (i.p.) at a dose of 3 mg kg−1 in 100 μl of 0.9% NaCl, thrice weekly for 4 to 8 weeks. The control group was not treated or received IgG1injections (the same dose and protocol as for P245 mAb). The RTV for each mouse was the ratio of tumour volume at time t to the initial volume. Mean RTV and standard errors were calculated. Mice were ethically killed when the tumour volume reached 2500 mm3. Statistical significance of observed differences was calculated by the paired Student′s t test by comparing the RTV in the treated (T) and control (C) groups for the tumour growth curves and by the χ2 test for the tumour relapse frequencies. (D) Embedded gene expression changes induced by anti-CD44 mAb treatment of HBCx-8: mRNA levels of proinflammatory human cytokines (IL-1β, TGFβ1, Oncostatin M and TNF-7α) were measured by real-time quantitative RT–PCR. mRNA was extracted from frozen tumours excised at the end of P245 treatment. Shown are results from one representative of three experiments. Each sample was run in duplicate and the mean value was expressed as cycle threshold (CT), *⩽0.05, **⩽0.02, ***⩽0.05.
Figure 2HBCx-10 recurrences after adriamycin/cyclophosphamide (AC) chemotherapy and their prevention by P245 mAb treatment. Detection of human CD44 transcripts in the post-chemotherapy tumour residue. (A) Tumour growth curves of HBCx-10 after chemotherapy alone or chemotherapy followed by P245 anti-CD44 mAb treatment. Tumour bearing mice were all treated with the AC combination (adriamycin 2 mg kg−1, cyclophosphamide 100 mg kg−1) when the tumour reached a median volume of 100 mm3. Mice were then separated into two groups until tumour remission was complete (i.e., the tumours were not palpable). The y axis shows the tumour volume median. One group was treated three times per week with P245 anti-CD44 mAb (3 mg kg−1 for 5 weeks). The control group was untreated. (B) Detection of human CD44 transcripts in the residual fat pad tissue during the post-chemotherapy remission. CD44 mRNA expression was analysed by nested RT–PCR using human specific intron-spanning primers (designed with the PrimerExpress Software, Applied Biosystems) from mRNA of tumours or fat pad tissues frozen in liquid nitrogen and extracted as described earlier. Cross-species amplification and detection threshold of human CD44-transcribing cells was determined with a concentration range of human breast cancer cells (MDA-MB231) in murine fibroblasts (NIH-3T3). Data are shown as the human CD44 signal obtained after two amplification sets of 2 μg of cDNA from HBCx-10 tumours before adriamycin/cyclophosphamide (AC) treatment (mice no.1 and 2), during the relapse in the control group (mice no. 6, 7 and 8) compared with mice fat pad during complete remission (mice no. 3, 4 and 5). Shown are results from one representative of three experiments. (C) Immunohistology of HBCx-10 tumour nodules during tumour remission stained with biotin-conjugated Hermes-3 anti-human specific CD44 antibody. Haematoxylin/Eosin sections × 400 (left) and × 200 (right). Left: single tumour cell nodules strongly positive for CD44 (arrow) isolated among unstained small murine cells. Right: murine tissue containing adipocytes and stroma with disseminated clumps of human tumour cells expressing CD44 (arrows).