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TRAIL-induced programmed necrosis as a novel approach to eliminate tumor cells

BACKGROUND: The cytokine TRAIL represents one of the most promising candidates for the apoptotic elimination of tumor cells, either alone or in combination therapies. However, its efficacy is often limited by intrinsic or acquired resistance of tumor cells to apoptosis. Programmed necrosis is an alt...

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Autores principales: Voigt, Susann, Philipp, Stephan, Davarnia, Parvin, Winoto-Morbach, Supandi, Röder, Christian, Arenz, Christoph, Trauzold, Anna, Kabelitz, Dieter, Schütze, Stefan, Kalthoff, Holger, Adam, Dieter
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2014
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Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3927850/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24507727
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-14-74
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author Voigt, Susann
Philipp, Stephan
Davarnia, Parvin
Winoto-Morbach, Supandi
Röder, Christian
Arenz, Christoph
Trauzold, Anna
Kabelitz, Dieter
Schütze, Stefan
Kalthoff, Holger
Adam, Dieter
author_facet Voigt, Susann
Philipp, Stephan
Davarnia, Parvin
Winoto-Morbach, Supandi
Röder, Christian
Arenz, Christoph
Trauzold, Anna
Kabelitz, Dieter
Schütze, Stefan
Kalthoff, Holger
Adam, Dieter
author_sort Voigt, Susann
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The cytokine TRAIL represents one of the most promising candidates for the apoptotic elimination of tumor cells, either alone or in combination therapies. However, its efficacy is often limited by intrinsic or acquired resistance of tumor cells to apoptosis. Programmed necrosis is an alternative, molecularly distinct mode of programmed cell death that is elicited by TRAIL under conditions when the classical apoptosis machinery fails or is actively inhibited. The potential of TRAIL-induced programmed necrosis in tumor therapy is, however, almost completely uncharacterized. We therefore investigated its impact on a panel of tumor cell lines of wide-ranging origin. METHODS: Cell death/viability was measured by flow cytometry/determination of intracellular ATP levels/crystal violet staining. Cell surface expression of TRAIL receptors was detected by flow cytometry, expression of proteins by Western blot. Ceramide levels were quantified by high-performance thin layer chromatography and densitometric analysis, clonogenic survival of cells was determined by crystal violet staining or by soft agarose cloning. RESULTS: TRAIL-induced programmed necrosis killed eight out of 14 tumor cell lines. Clonogenic survival was reduced in all sensitive and even one resistant cell lines tested. TRAIL synergized with chemotherapeutics in killing tumor cell lines by programmed necrosis, enhancing their effect in eight out of 10 tested tumor cell lines and in 41 out of 80 chemotherapeutic/TRAIL combinations. Susceptibility/resistance of the investigated tumor cell lines to programmed necrosis seems to primarily depend on expression of the pro-necrotic kinase RIPK3 rather than the related kinase RIPK1 or cell surface expression of TRAIL receptors. Furthermore, interference with production of the lipid ceramide protected all tested tumor cell lines. CONCLUSIONS: Our study provides evidence that TRAIL-induced programmed necrosis represents a feasible approach for the elimination of tumor cells, and that this treatment may represent a promising new option for the future development of combination therapies. Our data also suggest that RIPK3 expression may serve as a potential predictive marker for the sensitivity of tumor cells to programmed necrosis and extend the previously established role of ceramide as a key mediator of death receptor-induced programmed necrosis (and thus as a potential target for future therapies) also to the tumor cell lines examined here.
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spelling pubmed-39278502014-02-19 TRAIL-induced programmed necrosis as a novel approach to eliminate tumor cells Voigt, Susann Philipp, Stephan Davarnia, Parvin Winoto-Morbach, Supandi Röder, Christian Arenz, Christoph Trauzold, Anna Kabelitz, Dieter Schütze, Stefan Kalthoff, Holger Adam, Dieter BMC Cancer Research Article BACKGROUND: The cytokine TRAIL represents one of the most promising candidates for the apoptotic elimination of tumor cells, either alone or in combination therapies. However, its efficacy is often limited by intrinsic or acquired resistance of tumor cells to apoptosis. Programmed necrosis is an alternative, molecularly distinct mode of programmed cell death that is elicited by TRAIL under conditions when the classical apoptosis machinery fails or is actively inhibited. The potential of TRAIL-induced programmed necrosis in tumor therapy is, however, almost completely uncharacterized. We therefore investigated its impact on a panel of tumor cell lines of wide-ranging origin. METHODS: Cell death/viability was measured by flow cytometry/determination of intracellular ATP levels/crystal violet staining. Cell surface expression of TRAIL receptors was detected by flow cytometry, expression of proteins by Western blot. Ceramide levels were quantified by high-performance thin layer chromatography and densitometric analysis, clonogenic survival of cells was determined by crystal violet staining or by soft agarose cloning. RESULTS: TRAIL-induced programmed necrosis killed eight out of 14 tumor cell lines. Clonogenic survival was reduced in all sensitive and even one resistant cell lines tested. TRAIL synergized with chemotherapeutics in killing tumor cell lines by programmed necrosis, enhancing their effect in eight out of 10 tested tumor cell lines and in 41 out of 80 chemotherapeutic/TRAIL combinations. Susceptibility/resistance of the investigated tumor cell lines to programmed necrosis seems to primarily depend on expression of the pro-necrotic kinase RIPK3 rather than the related kinase RIPK1 or cell surface expression of TRAIL receptors. Furthermore, interference with production of the lipid ceramide protected all tested tumor cell lines. CONCLUSIONS: Our study provides evidence that TRAIL-induced programmed necrosis represents a feasible approach for the elimination of tumor cells, and that this treatment may represent a promising new option for the future development of combination therapies. Our data also suggest that RIPK3 expression may serve as a potential predictive marker for the sensitivity of tumor cells to programmed necrosis and extend the previously established role of ceramide as a key mediator of death receptor-induced programmed necrosis (and thus as a potential target for future therapies) also to the tumor cell lines examined here. BioMed Central 2014-02-07 /pmc/articles/PMC3927850/ /pubmed/24507727 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-14-74 Text en Copyright © 2014 Voigt et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Voigt, Susann
Philipp, Stephan
Davarnia, Parvin
Winoto-Morbach, Supandi
Röder, Christian
Arenz, Christoph
Trauzold, Anna
Kabelitz, Dieter
Schütze, Stefan
Kalthoff, Holger
Adam, Dieter
TRAIL-induced programmed necrosis as a novel approach to eliminate tumor cells
title TRAIL-induced programmed necrosis as a novel approach to eliminate tumor cells
title_full TRAIL-induced programmed necrosis as a novel approach to eliminate tumor cells
title_fullStr TRAIL-induced programmed necrosis as a novel approach to eliminate tumor cells
title_full_unstemmed TRAIL-induced programmed necrosis as a novel approach to eliminate tumor cells
title_short TRAIL-induced programmed necrosis as a novel approach to eliminate tumor cells
title_sort trail-induced programmed necrosis as a novel approach to eliminate tumor cells
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3927850/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24507727
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-14-74
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