Antitumoral effects of 9-cis retinoic acid in adrenocortical cancer

被引:0
|
作者
Diana Rita Szabó
Kornélia Baghy
Peter M. Szabó
Adrienn Zsippai
István Marczell
Zoltán Nagy
Vivien Varga
Katalin Éder
Sára Tóth
Edit I. Buzás
András Falus
Ilona Kovalszky
Attila Patócs
Károly Rácz
Peter Igaz
机构
[1] Semmelweis University,2nd Department of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine
[2] Semmelweis University,1st Department of Pathology and Experimental Cancer Research, Faculty of Medicine
[3] Hungarian Academy of Sciences and Semmelweis University,Molecular Medicine Research Group
[4] Semmelweis University,Department of Genetics, Cell
来源
Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2014年 / 71卷
关键词
Adrenocortical cancer; 9-; retinoic acid; Hormone production; Microarray; Xenograft; Tumor growth;
D O I
暂无
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学科分类号
摘要
The currently available medical treatment options of adrenocortical cancer (ACC) are limited. In our previous meta-analysis of adrenocortical tumor genomics data, ACC was associated with reduced retinoic acid production and retinoid X receptor-mediated signaling. Our objective has been to study the potential antitumoral effects of 9-cis retinoic acid (9-cisRA) on the ACC cell line NCI-H295R and in a xenograft model. Cell proliferation, hormone secretion, and gene expression have been studied in the NCI-H295R cell line. A complex bioinformatics approach involving pathway and network analysis has been performed. Selected genes have been validated by real-time qRT-PCR. Athymic nude mice xenografted with NCI-H295R have been used in a pilot in vivo xenograft model. 9-cisRA significantly decreased cell viability and steroid hormone secretion in a concentration- and time-dependent manner in the NCI-H295R cell line. Four major molecular pathways have been identified by the analysis of gene expression data. Ten genes have been successfully validated involved in: (1) steroid hormone secretion (HSD3B1, HSD3B2), (2) retinoic acid signaling (ABCA1, ABCG1, HMGCR), (3) cell-cycle damage (GADD45A, CCNE2, UHRF1), and the (4) immune response (MAP2K6, IL1R2). 9-cisRA appears to directly regulate the cell cycle by network analysis. 9-cisRA also reduced tumor growth in the in vivo xenograft model. In conclusion, 9-cisRA might represent a promising new candidate in the treatment of hormone-secreting adrenal tumors and adrenocortical cancer.
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页码:917 / 932
页数:15
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