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14-3-3 σ Expression Effects G2/M Response to Oxygen and Correlates with Ovarian Cancer Metastasis

BACKGROUND: In vitro cell culture experiments with primary cells have reported that cell proliferation is retarded in the presence of ambient compared to physiological O(2) levels. Cancer is primarily a disease of aberrant cell proliferation, therefore, studying cancer cells grown under ambient O(2)...

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Autores principales: Ravi, Dashnamoorthy, Chen, Yidong, Karia, Bijal, Brown, Adam, Gu, Ting Ting, Li, Jie, Carey, Mark S., Hennessy, Bryan T., Bishop, Alexander J. R.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3018427/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21249227
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0015864
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author Ravi, Dashnamoorthy
Chen, Yidong
Karia, Bijal
Brown, Adam
Gu, Ting Ting
Li, Jie
Carey, Mark S.
Hennessy, Bryan T.
Bishop, Alexander J. R.
author_facet Ravi, Dashnamoorthy
Chen, Yidong
Karia, Bijal
Brown, Adam
Gu, Ting Ting
Li, Jie
Carey, Mark S.
Hennessy, Bryan T.
Bishop, Alexander J. R.
author_sort Ravi, Dashnamoorthy
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: In vitro cell culture experiments with primary cells have reported that cell proliferation is retarded in the presence of ambient compared to physiological O(2) levels. Cancer is primarily a disease of aberrant cell proliferation, therefore, studying cancer cells grown under ambient O(2) may be undesirable. To understand better the impact of O(2) on the propagation of cancer cells in vitro, we compared the growth potential of a panel of ovarian cancer cell lines under ambient (21%) or physiological (3%) O(2). PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Our observations demonstrate that similar to primary cells, many cancer cells maintain an inherent sensitivity to O(2), but some display insensitivity to changes in O(2) concentration. Further analysis revealed an association between defective G2/M cell cycle transition regulation and O(2) insensitivity resultant from overexpression of 14-3-3 σ. Targeting 14-3-3 σ overexpression with RNAi restored O(2) sensitivity in these cell lines. Additionally, we found that metastatic ovarian tumors frequently overexpress 14-3-3 σ, which in conjunction with phosphorylated RB, results in poor prognosis. CONCLUSIONS: Cancer cells show differential proliferative sensitivity to changes in O(2) concentration. Although a direct link between O(2) insensitivity and metastasis was not determined, this investigation showed that an O(2) insensitive phenotype in cancer cells to correlate with metastatic tumor progression.
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spelling pubmed-30184272011-01-19 14-3-3 σ Expression Effects G2/M Response to Oxygen and Correlates with Ovarian Cancer Metastasis Ravi, Dashnamoorthy Chen, Yidong Karia, Bijal Brown, Adam Gu, Ting Ting Li, Jie Carey, Mark S. Hennessy, Bryan T. Bishop, Alexander J. R. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: In vitro cell culture experiments with primary cells have reported that cell proliferation is retarded in the presence of ambient compared to physiological O(2) levels. Cancer is primarily a disease of aberrant cell proliferation, therefore, studying cancer cells grown under ambient O(2) may be undesirable. To understand better the impact of O(2) on the propagation of cancer cells in vitro, we compared the growth potential of a panel of ovarian cancer cell lines under ambient (21%) or physiological (3%) O(2). PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Our observations demonstrate that similar to primary cells, many cancer cells maintain an inherent sensitivity to O(2), but some display insensitivity to changes in O(2) concentration. Further analysis revealed an association between defective G2/M cell cycle transition regulation and O(2) insensitivity resultant from overexpression of 14-3-3 σ. Targeting 14-3-3 σ overexpression with RNAi restored O(2) sensitivity in these cell lines. Additionally, we found that metastatic ovarian tumors frequently overexpress 14-3-3 σ, which in conjunction with phosphorylated RB, results in poor prognosis. CONCLUSIONS: Cancer cells show differential proliferative sensitivity to changes in O(2) concentration. Although a direct link between O(2) insensitivity and metastasis was not determined, this investigation showed that an O(2) insensitive phenotype in cancer cells to correlate with metastatic tumor progression. Public Library of Science 2011-01-10 /pmc/articles/PMC3018427/ /pubmed/21249227 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0015864 Text en Ravi et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ravi, Dashnamoorthy
Chen, Yidong
Karia, Bijal
Brown, Adam
Gu, Ting Ting
Li, Jie
Carey, Mark S.
Hennessy, Bryan T.
Bishop, Alexander J. R.
14-3-3 σ Expression Effects G2/M Response to Oxygen and Correlates with Ovarian Cancer Metastasis
title 14-3-3 σ Expression Effects G2/M Response to Oxygen and Correlates with Ovarian Cancer Metastasis
title_full 14-3-3 σ Expression Effects G2/M Response to Oxygen and Correlates with Ovarian Cancer Metastasis
title_fullStr 14-3-3 σ Expression Effects G2/M Response to Oxygen and Correlates with Ovarian Cancer Metastasis
title_full_unstemmed 14-3-3 σ Expression Effects G2/M Response to Oxygen and Correlates with Ovarian Cancer Metastasis
title_short 14-3-3 σ Expression Effects G2/M Response to Oxygen and Correlates with Ovarian Cancer Metastasis
title_sort 14-3-3 σ expression effects g2/m response to oxygen and correlates with ovarian cancer metastasis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3018427/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21249227
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0015864
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