Literature DB >> 22258765

A functional, new short isoform of death receptor 4 in Ewing's sarcoma cell lines may be involved in TRAIL sensitivity/resistance mechanisms.

Gaëlle Picarda1, Sylvanie Surget, Romain Guiho, Stéphane Téletchéa, Martine Berreur, Franck Tirode, Catherine Pellat-Deceunynck, Dominique Heymann, Valérie Trichet, Françoise Rédini.   

Abstract

Ewing's sarcoma (ES) is a high-grade neoplasm arising in bones of children and adolescents. Survival rate decreases from greater than 50% to only 20% after 5 years for patients not responding to treatment or presenting metastases at diagnosis. TRAIL, which has strong antitumoral activity, is a promising therapeutic candidate. To address TRAIL sensitivity, 7 human ES cell lines were used. Cell viability experiments [3'[1-(phenylaminocarbonyl)-3,4-tetrazolium]-bis(4-methoxy-6-nitro-)benzene sulfonic acid hydrate (XTT) assay] showed that 4 of the 7 ES cell lines were resistant to TRAIL. Western blotting and flow cytometry analyses revealed that DR5 was uniformly expressed by all ES cell lines, whereas DR4 levels were higher in sensitive cell lines. In TRAIL-sensitive TC-71 cells, knockdown of TNFRSF10A/DR4 by short hairpin RNA (shRNA) was associated with a loss of sensitivity to TRAIL, in spite of DR5 presence. Interestingly, we identified a new transcript variant that results from an alternative splicing and encodes a 310-amino acid protein which corresponds to the 468 aa of DR4 original isoform but truncated of aa 11 to 168 within the extracellular TRAIL-binding domain. According to modeling studies, the contact of this new DR4 isoform (bDR4) with TRAIL seemed largely preserved. The overexpression of bDR4 in a TRAIL-resistant cell line restored TRAIL sensitivity. TRAIL resensitization was also observed after c-FLIP knockdown by shRNA in two TRAIL-resistant cell lines, as shown by XTT assay and caspase-3 assay. The results presented in this study showed that DR4, both as the complete form or as its new short isoform, is involved in TRAIL sensitivity in ES.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22258765     DOI: 10.1158/1541-7786.MCR-11-0390

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Cancer Res        ISSN: 1541-7786            Impact factor:   5.852


  4 in total

Review 1.  Twenty Years on: What Do We Really Know about Ewing Sarcoma and What Is the Path Forward?

Authors:  Elizabeth R Lawlor; Poul H Sorensen
Journal:  Crit Rev Oncog       Date:  2015

2.  The first European interdisciplinary ewing sarcoma research summit.

Authors:  Heinrich Kovar; Javier Alonso; Pierre Aman; Dave N T Aryee; Jozef Ban; Sue A Burchill; Stefan Burdach; Enrique De Alava; Olivier Delattre; Uta Dirksen; Argyro Fourtouna; Simone Fulda; Lee J Helman; David Herrero-Martin; Pancras C W Hogendoorn; Udo Kontny; Elizabeth R Lawlor; Stephen L Lessnick; Antonio Llombart-Bosch; Markus Metzler; Richard Moriggl; Stephan Niedan; Jenny Potratz; Françoise Redini; Günther H S Richter; Lucia T Riedmann; Claudia Rossig; Beat W Schäfer; Raphaela Schwentner; Katia Scotlandi; Poul H Sorensen; Martin S Staege; Franck Tirode; Jeffrey Toretsky; Selena Ventura; Angelika Eggert; Ruth Ladenstein
Journal:  Front Oncol       Date:  2012-05-29       Impact factor: 6.244

3.  Caspase-8 expression is predictive of tumour response to death receptor 5 agonist antibody in Ewing's sarcoma.

Authors:  Zhigang Kang; Seth D Goldstein; Yunkai Yu; Paul S Meltzer; David M Loeb; Liang Cao
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2015-08-20       Impact factor: 7.640

Review 4.  Differential Impacts of Alternative Splicing Networks on Apoptosis.

Authors:  Jung-Chun Lin; Mei-Fen Tsao; Ying-Ju Lin
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2016-12-14       Impact factor: 5.923

  4 in total

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