| Literature DB >> 24212821 |
Michio Abe1, Zbigniew P Kortylewicz, Charles A Enke, Elizabeth Mack, Janina Baranowska-Kortylewicz.
Abstract
Pancreatic cancer does not respond to a single-agent imatinib therapy. Consequently, multimodality treatments are contemplated. Published data indicate that in colorectal cancer, imatinib and radioimmunotherapy synergize to delay tumor growth. In pancreatic cancer, the tumor response is additive. This disparity of outcomes merited further studies because interactions between these modalities depend on the imatinib-induced reduction of the tumor interstitial fluid pressure. The examination of human and murine PDGFr-β/PDGF-B pathways in SW1990 pancreatic cancer xenografts revealed that the human branch is practically dormant in untreated tumors but the insult on the stromal component produces massive responses of human cancer cells. Inhibition of the stromal PDGFr-β with imatinib activates human PDGFr-β/PDGF-B signaling loop, silent in untreated xenografts, via an apparent paracrine rescue pathway. Responses are treatment- and time-dependent. Soon after treatment, levels of human PDGFr-β, compared to untreated tumors, are 3.4×, 12.4×, and 5.7× higher in imatinib-, radioimmunotherapy + imatinib-, and radioimmunotherapy-treated tumors, respectively. A continuous 14-day irradiation of imatinib-treated xenografts reduces levels of PDGFr-β and phosphorylated PDGFr-β by 5.3× and 4×, compared to earlier times. Human PDGF-B is upregulated suggesting that the survival signaling via the autocrine pathway is also triggered after stromal injury. These findings indicate that therapies targeting pancreatic cancer stromal components may have unintended mitogenic effects and that these effects can be reversed when imatinib is used in conjunction with radioimmunotherapy.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 24212821 PMCID: PMC3757429 DOI: 10.3390/cancers3022501
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1.Expression of various forms of PDGFr-β in lysates prepared from SW1990 human pancreatic adenocarcinoma xenografts extirpated 5 d and 14 d after various treatments and measured using commercial ELISA kits. White bars represent the expression of PDGFr-β in tumors from control mice. Note different scales of the y-axes.
Figure 2.Expression of PDGFr-β in SW1990 human pancreatic SW1990 adenocarcinoma xenografts grown subcutaneously in athymic mice. (a) Phosphorylated PDGFr-β of human and mouse origin. Western immunoblotting analyses of phosphorylated PDGFr-β with rabbit anti-human/anti-mouse phospho-PDGFr-β (Tyr751) polyclonal Ab3161 antibodies. The lower panel is the same membrane probed with rabbit anti-β-actin mAb 13E5. The bar graph represents protein band intensity normalized to the protein load as measured by the intensity of β-actin band using ImageJ. (b) Total PDGFr-β. Western immunoblotting analyses with rabbit anti-human/anti-mouse PDGFr-β polyclonal Ab3162 to determine the total expression of PDGFr-β in response to various treatments. The lower panel is the same membrane probed with rabbit anti-β-actin mAb 13E5 to determine total protein load per lane. The bar graph represents protein band intensity normalized using ImageJ to the protein load as measured by the intensity of β-actin band. Immunoblots for β-actin are identical in A and B because the same membrane was re-probed. Data for xenografts from control mice sham-treated with PBS are framed by the black rectangle.
Figure 3.Activation of human PDGFr-β signaling pathway in response to imatininb and radiation injury. Expression of human PDGFr-β. Western immunoblotting analyses with mouse monoclonal anti-human PDGFr-β monoclonal antibodies ab10847 to determine expression of human PDGFr-β in response to various treatments. The bands were detected with ImmunoPure goat anti-mouse IgG (H + L), peroxidase conjugated antibodies 31430. The lower panel is the same membrane probed with rabbit anti-β-actin mAb 13E5. The bar graph represents protein band intensity normalized to the protein load as measured by the intensity of β-actin band using ImageJ.
Figure 4.Time-and treatment-dependent changes in the expression of mouse PDGF-B (A) and human PDGF-B (B).
Figure 5.Immunohistochemistry of PDGF-B and PDGFr-β in xenografts extirpated from PBS-and imatinib-treated mice. Original magnification 10×, counterstained with hematoxylin.