Radiosensitization of Malignant Glioma Cells through Overexpression of Dominant-Negative Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor
The epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) plays an important role in neoplastic growth control of malignant gliomas. We have demonstrated that radiation activates EGFR Tyr-phosphorylation (EGFR Tyr-P) and the proliferation of surviving human carcinoma cells, a likely mechanism of accelerated cellu...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Clinical cancer research 2001-03, Vol.7 (3), p.682-690 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) plays an important role in neoplastic growth control of malignant gliomas. We
have demonstrated that radiation activates EGFR Tyr-phosphorylation (EGFR Tyr-P) and the proliferation of surviving human
carcinoma cells, a likely mechanism of accelerated cellular repopulation, a major cytoprotective response after radiation.
We now investigate the importance of radiation-induced activation of EGFR on the radiosensitivity of the human malignant glioma
cells U-87 MG and U-373 MG. The function of EGFR was inhibited through a genetic approach of transducing cells with an Adenovirus
(Ad) vector containing dominant-negative (DN) EGFR-CD533 (Ad-EGFR-CD533) at efficiencies of 85–90%. The resulting cells are
referred to as U-87-EGFR-CD533 and U-373-EGFR-CD533. After irradiation at 2 Gy, both of the cell lines exhibited a mean 3-fold
increase in EGFR Tyr-P. The expression of EGFR-CD533 completely inhibited the radiation-induced activation of EGFR. In clonogenic
survival assays after a single radiation exposure, the radiation dose for a survival of 37% (D 37 ) for U-87-EGFR-CD533 cells was 1.4- to 1.5-fold lower, relative to cells transduced with AdLacZ or untransduced U-87 MG cells.
This effect was amplified with repeated radiation exposures (3 × 2 Gy) yielding a D 37 ratio of 1.8–2.0. In clonogenic survival studies with U-373 MG cells, the radiosensitizing effect of EGFR-CD533 was similar.
Furthermore, in vivo studies with U-87 MG xenografts confirmed the effect of EGFR-CD533 on tumor radiosensitization (dose enhancement ratio, 1.8).
We conclude that inhibition of EGFR function via Ad-mediated gene transfer of EGFR-CD533 results in significant radiosensitization.
As underlying mechanism, we suggest the disruption of a major cytoprotective response involving EGFR and its downstream effectors,
such as mitogen-activated protein kinase. The experiments demonstrate for the first time that radiosensitization of malignant
glioma cells through disruption of EGFR function may be achieved by genetic therapy approaches. |
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ISSN: | 1078-0432 1557-3265 |