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Inhibitory effects of a specific phage-displayed peptide on high peritoneal metastasis of gastric cancer
- Source :
- Journal of Molecular Medicine. 85:169-180
- Publication Year :
- 2006
- Publisher :
- Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2006.
-
Abstract
- Peritoneal dissemination in gastric cancer is the most frequent cause of the noncurative resection and recurrence after curative resection. We, therefore, evaluated the feasibility of a peptide, which was obtained by screening a random phage display library, in the treatment of peritoneal metastases of gastric cancer. In this study, a novel cell line, GC9811-P, with a high potential peritoneal metastasis of gastric cancer derived from its parental cell line, GC9811, was established. Using a phage display library, we isolated a specific peptide that selectively bound to GC9811-P cells rather than its parental GC9811cells. The isolated phage-displaying peptide, SMSIASPYIALE (named peptide PIII), was obtained after four rounds of selection, showing a tendency to preferentially bind to GC9811-P cells compared with a panel of other gastric cancer cell lines, and preferentially accumulate in peritoneal metastasis tumor tissue in comparison with control organs, peritoneum, liver, pancreas, spleen, lung, and kidney. Further study showed that synthetic peptide PIII could significantly inhibit adhesive and invasional ability of GC9811-P cells and could effectively block the corresponding phage binding to the GC9811-P cells, whereas, exposure of the cells to various concentrations of peptide PIII showed no obvious cell growth inhibition. Furthermore, a highly reproducible animal experimental model of gastric cancer with peritoneal dissemination was established in nude mice by injecting a suspension of the cell line into the gastric wall of nude mice. Animals intraperitoneally treated with peptide PIII in this model or another animal model of gastric cancer with peritoneal dissemination established using MKN45 cells showed suppressed tumor metastasis to peritoneum and significantly prolonged survival. In conclusion, the selected peptide PIII was a biologically active peptide and could effectively inhibit peritoneal dissemination of gastric cancer.
- Subjects :
- Pathology
medicine.medical_specialty
Phage display
Mice, Nude
Metastasis
Mice
Peritoneal Neoplasm
Peritoneum
Peptide Library
Stomach Neoplasms
Cell Line, Tumor
Drug Discovery
Animals
Humans
Medicine
Neoplasm Invasiveness
Neoplasm Metastasis
Stomach cancer
Peptide library
Peritoneal Neoplasms
Genetics (clinical)
business.industry
Cell growth
Cancer
medicine.disease
Survival Rate
medicine.anatomical_structure
Cancer research
Molecular Medicine
Peptides
business
Neoplasm Transplantation
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 14321440 and 09462716
- Volume :
- 85
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Molecular Medicine
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....e311c2d49bfd21d8ae7ad62dcf9e7308