| Literature DB >> 20573279 |
Diala El Khoury1, Damien Destouches, Renée Lengagne, Bernard Krust, Yamina Hamma-Kourbali, Marylène Garcette, Sandra Niro, Masashi Kato, Jean-Paul Briand, José Courty, Ara G Hovanessian, Armelle Prévost-Blondel.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The importance of cell-surface nucleolin in cancer biology was recently highlighted by studies showing that ligands of nucleolin play critical role in tumorigenesis and angiogenesis. By using a specific antagonist that binds the C-terminal tail of nucleolin, the HB-19 pseudopeptide, we recently reported that HB-19 treatment markedly suppressed the progression of established human breast tumor cell xenografts in the athymic nude mice without apparent toxicity.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20573279 PMCID: PMC2912263 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2407-10-325
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Particular aspects of the clinical diagnosis for each control and HB-19 treated RET mice
| Treatment | Remarks in mice before autopsy (< Day 300) | Diagnosis at autopsy (Day 300) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mice | Regression | Death | Cutaneous tumor location and size (mm) | Distant metastasis | |
| Control | 1 | under eye 4, nose 3.1, under ear 4.9, back 6.7, 2.8 and 2.9, thigh 5.9 | Mediastinal | ||
| 2 | cheek 4.9, eye 6.2, under ear 5.4, 6.2, 7 and 5.7, back 6.3 and 4.2, around genitals 3.8 and 4.7 | None | |||
| 3 | cheek 3.3, under ear 6.7, around eye 6.3, back ear 3.5, back 3.2, thigh 5.1 | Retroperitoneal | |||
| 4 | under eye 6.7 and 2.3, cheek 4.1 and 3, upper ear 2.8, under ear 3.4 and 5.6, leg 4.9 and 4.3, genitals 4 | Retroperitoneal | |||
| 5 | under eye 11, 4 leg neighboring nodules 13.9 | Visceral | |||
| 6 | upper eye 6.3, under eye 2.6, between ears 5.4 | Retroperitoneal | |||
| 7 | cheek 2.9, nose 4.3, under ear 3.8, ear 4.7 | Retroperitoneal | |||
| 8 | cheek 3.1, under eye 2.7 | None | |||
| 9 | under ear 2.5, between eyes 3.8, under eye 6.3 and 3, leg 6.8, genitals 5.5, tail base 5.9 | Retroperitoneal | |||
| 10 | cheek 5.6, 5.1, 3.4 and 3.7, under eye 7.4, leg 4.7, thigh 11.3 | None | |||
| 11 | back ears 4.9, back 2.8, 1.9, 6.4, 3.5 and 2.2 | Retroperitonel | |||
| HB-19 treated | 1 | under eye 6, cheek 3.5, around left eye 7.7, between ears 5, genitals 8, foot 9.2, tail 3.6 | Visceral | ||
| 2 | under eye and thigh | cheek 5.2 and 3, under eye 5, 3 nodules on the left cheek < 1, between ears 8.2, thigh 8.2, foot 7.9 | Visceral | ||
| 3 | cheek 2.5, under ear 5.7, back 9.6, 5.5 and 3.2, thigh 6 | Lung | |||
| 4 | Tumor free mouse | None | |||
| Tumor free mouse at day 219 | None | ||||
| 6 | Tumor free mouse | None | |||
| 7 | cheek 1.4, under eye 3.9, back ears 6.4 | None | |||
| 8 | under eye 3.9, under ear 4.7, back 1.5, tail base 2.3 | None | |||
| 9 | around eye 6.7 | None | |||
The particular aspects of the clinical diagnosis for the control (n = 11) and HB-19 treated (n = 9) RET mice are presented individually for each mouse. Column "Remarks in mice before autopsy" before day 300 gives tumor regression and natural death that occurred in HB-19 treated mouse 2 and 5, respectively. Column "Diagnosis at autopsy" at day 300 gives the location of cutaneous tumors and their size measured with a caliper (the numbers next to each location correspond to the size of the tumor mass in mm), and metastasis occuring at distant locations, i.e., visceral metastasis as well as mediastinal adenopathies or lung metastasis (column "Distant metastasis"). Such non-cutaneous tumors were all chracterized by a large tumor mass (> 4 mm).
* Mouse N°5 died spontaneously at day 219 without symptoms of melanoma.
Figure 1HB-19 inhibits significantly spontaneous melanoma development. RET mice were treated with HB-19 according to the schedule indicated in Methods and diagnosed frequently over a period of 300 days. A/B. HB-19 treatment delays significantly the onset of small cutaneous tumors (≥ 4 mm2) in panel A and of huge cutaneous tumors (> 60 mm2) in panel B (Log-rank Wilcoxon test, p < 0.001 for both graphs). The dotted lines correspond to data from untreated mice (n = 11) and full lines correspond to HB-19 treated mice (n = 9). C/D. HB-19 treatment significantly delays the incidence of facial (C) and dorsal (D) cutaneous nodules in RET mice. The dotted lines correspond to data from untreated mice and full lines correspond to HB-19 treated mice (Log-rank Wilcoxon test, p < 0.001). E/F. Number of facial (E) and dorsal (F) cutaneous nodules during the period of 120 days. The histograms show the progression of the number of nodules (calculated for 10 mice) in untreated (hatched bars) and HB-19 treated (black bars) mice, respectively. HB-19 treated mice displayed less cutaneous nodules than untreated mice (p < 0.05 for both graphs).
Figure 2Reduced density of blood vessels in tumors recovered from HB-19 treated RET mice. Sections of tumors from control untreated (panel A; localized under the ear) and HB-19 treated (panel B; localized under the eye) RET mice were stained with antibodies against the CD34 endothelial marker and analyzed by fluorescence microscopy (Methods). Representative macroscopic images (magnification 200×) from each group of sections are presented. C. Quantification of angiogenesis was estimated by image analysis of CD34-labeled endothelial cells in tumor sections from control and HB-19 treated RET mice. Statistical significance: * 0.01 < p < 0.1.
HB-19 treatment does not modify the proportion of tumor infiltrating hematopoietic cells
| Mice | Mouse Number | % CD45+ cells | % CD11b+ cells | % TCRαβ+ cells |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Control | 1 | 3.7 | 80.4 | 3.7 |
| 3 | 1.7 | 75.8 | 3.8 | |
| 4 | 2.9 | 79.8 | 3.1 | |
| 6 | 2.4 | 72.2 | 3.9 | |
| 7 | 1.2 | 67.1 | 7.3 | |
| 9 | 2.3 | 84.3 | 2.9 | |
| 10 | 1.2 | 77.0 | 5.0 | |
| 11 | 2.4 | 77.0 | 3.9 | |
| HB-19 treated | 7 | 3.8 | 76.5 | 5.0 |
| 8 | 3.3 | 56.0 | 6.9 | |
Single cell suspensions were prepared from pools of cutaneous tumors of mice that were still alive at day 300. FACS analysis of hematopoietic cells infiltrating melanoma tumors was carried using pooled suspension of various tumors in control and HB-19 treated mice (see Table 1 and Methods). Tumor infiltrating cells were stained with CD45/CD11b or with CD45/TcRαβ monoclonal antibodies.
Figure 3Restoration of growth contact-inhibition in HB-19 cultured TIII cells. TIII cells passaged 12-times in the absence or presence of 5 μM of HB-19 were fixed in PFA-Triton, and intracellular actin filaments were stained with FITC-conjugated phalloidin. Immunofluorescence (A) and confocal (B) microscopy was as described in Methods.
Figure 4HB-19 affects the malignant phenotype of melanoma TIII cells. A. Reduced colony formation in soft agar. TIII cells were cultured for twelve passages in the absence (control, histogram C) or presence of 1, 5 and 10 μM of HB-19 before assay for colony formation in the absence of further HB-19 treatment (***p < 0.001). B. Reduced tumorigenicity in mice. Tumor size was measured fourteen days after transplanting control (open circles, n = 14) or HB-19 precultured (black circles, n = 15) TIII cells. The graph corresponds to the results of two separate experiments. The mice transplanted with HB-19 precultured cells displayed tumors smaller than those treated with control cells (ANOVA, Mann Whitney test, p = 0.0276). C. Reduced lung metastasis in mice. Mice injected in the tail vein with TIII cells were treated (closed circles, n = 8) or not (open circles, n = 10) with HB-19, and the number of black lung macro-metastases was determined (ANOVA, Mann Whitney test, p = 0.0014).
Figure 5HB-19 treatment of TIII cells results in the reduction of transcripts coding MMP-2, MMP-9 and TNF-α. A. Expression of transcripts 24 hours after HB-19 treatment. Two days after seeding, TIII cells were cultured for 24 hours in the absence (Control) or presence of 10 or 25 μM of HB-19. B. Expression of transcripts in control and HB-19 cultured TIII cells (cultured as described in Figure 3). C. Expression of transcripts in control and HB-19 precultured TIII cells (as in section B) that were further passaged 7-times in the absence of HB-19. The expression of specific mRNAs was investigated by RT-PCR using primers for MMP-2, MMP-9, VEGF-A, TNF-α, STAT-1, MIA and GAPDH.
Figure 6Reduced expression of transcripts coding MMP-2, MMP-9 and TNF-α in melanoma tumors recovered from HB-19 treated RET mice. The expression of transcripts coding MMP-2, MMP-9, VEGF-A, TNF-α, STAT-1, MIA and GAPDH was investigated RT-PCR in tumors located at the eye, ear and intraperitoneum of control and HB-19 treated RET mice (as in Figure 5). The eye, ear and intraperitoneal tumors are representative for the firstly diagnosed nodule, a cutaneous nodule and a metastatic nodule, respectively. Equivalent tumor masses at similar locations were considered for comparison.