Regulation of signaling phosphoproteins by epidermal growth factor and Iressa (ZD1839) in human endometrial cancer cells that model type I and II tumors
To understand how type I and II endometrial tumors uniquely respond to tyrosine kinase inhibitor treatments, we evaluated the signaling pathways of epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor (EGFR) under the effects of EGF and Iressa (ZD1839, gefitinib) using Ishikawa H and Hec50co cells that model type...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Molecular cancer therapeutics 2005-12, Vol.4 (12), p.1891-1899 |
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Zusammenfassung: | To understand how type I and II endometrial tumors uniquely respond to tyrosine kinase inhibitor treatments, we evaluated
the signaling pathways of epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor (EGFR) under the effects of EGF and Iressa (ZD1839, gefitinib)
using Ishikawa H and Hec50co cells that model type I and II endometrial carcinomas, respectively. The cells were assayed for
the expression of EGFR and both cell lines express an average of 100,000 EGFR per cell; however, Ishikawa H cells express
higher levels of HER-2/ neu compared with Hec50co cells (1.38 × 10 5 compared with 2.04 × 10 4 , respectively). Using the Kinetworks multi-immunoblotting approach, which profiles 31 signaling phosphoproteins, the most
striking result was that Hec50co cells show a higher number of basal phosphorylated sites compared with Ishikawa H cells.
Furthermore, we identified targets of Iressa treatment in both cell lines. Iressa, at a dose of 1 μmol/L, blocked the autophosphorylation
of EGFR in Ishikawa H and Hec50co cells with some distinctive effects on downstream effectors. Nevertheless, in both cell
lines, EGF stimulated and Iressa blocked the major EGFR target mitogen-activated protein kinases extracellular signal-regulated
kinase 1 and 2 equally. The high basal phosphorylation of numerous signaling molecules in Hec50co cells that were not inhibited
by Iressa indicates that other growth factor pathways are active in addition to EGFR. We conclude that endometrial cancer
cells that model type I and II carcinomas have the capacity to respond to EGFR inhibition as a therapeutic strategy; however,
the response of the more aggressive type II tumors may be limited by the constitutive activation of other signaling pathways.
[Mol Cancer Ther 2005;4(12):1891–9] |
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ISSN: | 1535-7163 1538-8514 |
DOI: | 10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-05-0274 |