| Literature DB >> 26518652 |
Hideaki Ueno1, Arata Tomiyama2, Hideki Yamaguchi3, Takamasa Uekita4, Takuya Shirakihara3, Katsuhiko Nakashima3, Naoki Otani5, Kojiro Wada5, Ryuichi Sakai3, Hajime Arai6, Kentaro Mori5.
Abstract
Temozolomide (TMZ) is one of the few effective anticancer agents against gliomas. However, acquisition of TMZ resistance or adaptation by gliomas is currently a crucial problem, especially increased invasiveness which is critical for the determination of clinical prognosis. This study investigated the molecular regulatory mechanisms of TMZ resistance in gliomas involved in invasiveness, particularly invadopodia formation, a molecular complex formed at the invasive front to cause extracellular matrix degradation during cellular local invasion. The TMZ-resistant clone of the U343 MG human glioma cell line (U343-R cells) was established. U343-R cells demonstrated higher invadopodia formation compared with U343 cells without TMZ resistance (U343-Con cells). Immunoblot analysis of DNA damage-related mitogen-activated protein kinase signals found increased phosphorylation of c-Jun terminal kinase (JNK) and higher activation of its downstream signaling in U343-R cells compared with U343-Con cells. Treatment of U343-R cells with specific inhibitors of JNK or siRNA targeting JNK suppressed up-regulation of invadopodia formation. In addition, paxillin, one of the known JNK effectors which is phosphorylated and affects cell migration, was phosphorylated at serine 178 in JNK activity-dependent manner. Expression of paxillin with mutation of the serine 178 phosphorylation site in U343-R cells blocked invadopodia formation. The present findings suggest that increased formation of invadopodia in U343-R cells is mediated by hyperactivation of JNK-paxillin signaling, and both JNK and paxillin might become targets of novel therapies against TMZ-resistant gliomas.Entities:
Keywords: Glioma; Invadopodia; Invasion; JNK; Paxillin; Temozolomide-resistance
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26518652 DOI: 10.1016/j.bbrc.2015.10.122
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem Biophys Res Commun ISSN: 0006-291X Impact factor: 3.575