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Glutathione and Bcl-2 targeting facilitates elimination by chemoradiotherapy of human A375 melanoma xenografts overexpressing bcl-xl, bcl-2, and mcl-1

Authors :
Universitat Politècnica de València. Instituto de Reconocimiento Molecular y Desarrollo Tecnológico - Institut de Reconeixement Molecular i Desenvolupament Tecnològic
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación
Mena-Mollá, Salvador
Rodríguez, Maria L.
Ortega, Ángel
Priego, Sonia
Obrador, Elena
Asensi, Miguel
Petschen, Ignacio
Cerda, Miguel
Brown, Bob D.
Estrela, Jose M.
Universitat Politècnica de València. Instituto de Reconocimiento Molecular y Desarrollo Tecnológico - Institut de Reconeixement Molecular i Desenvolupament Tecnològic
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación
Mena-Mollá, Salvador
Rodríguez, Maria L.
Ortega, Ángel
Priego, Sonia
Obrador, Elena
Asensi, Miguel
Petschen, Ignacio
Cerda, Miguel
Brown, Bob D.
Estrela, Jose M.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

[EN] Background: Bcl-2 is believed to contribute to melanoma chemoresistance. However, expression of Bcl-2 proteins may be different among melanomas. Thus correlations among expression of Bcl-2-related proteins and in vivo melanoma progression, and resistance to combination therapies, was investigated. Methods: Human A375 melanoma was injected s.c. into immunodeficient nude mice. Protein expression was studied in tumor samples obtained by laser microdisection. Transfection of siRNA or ectopic overexpression were applied to manipulate proteins which are up- or down-regulated, preferentially, during melanoma progression. Anti-bcl-2 antisense oligonucleotides and chemoradiotherapy (glutathione-depleting agents, paclitaxel protein-binding particles, daunorubicin, X rays) were administered in combination. Results: In vivo A375 cells down-regulated pro-apoptotic bax expression; and up-regulated anti-apoptotic bcl-2, bcl-xl, and mcl-1, however only Bcl-2 appeared critical for long-term tumor cell survival and progression in vivo. Reduction of Bcl-2, combined with partial therapies, decreased melanoma growth. But only Bcl-2 targeting plus the full combination of chemoradiotherapy eradicated A375 melanoma, and led to long-term survival (> 120 days) without recurrence in 80% of mice. Tumor regression was not due to immune stimulation. Hematology and clinical chemistry data were within accepted clinical toxicities. Conclusion: Strategies to target Bcl-2, may increase the effectiveness of antitumor therapies against melanomas overexpressing Bcl-2 and likely other Bcl-2-related antiapoptotic proteins.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
TEXT, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1138437666
Document Type :
Electronic Resource