Antitumor effects of cytoplasmic delivery of an innate adjuvant receptor ligand, poly(I:C), on human breast

Breast cancer research and treatment Volume 134 Issue 1 Page 89-100 published_at 2012-07
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Title
Antitumor effects of cytoplasmic delivery of an innate adjuvant receptor ligand, poly(I:C), on human breast
Creator
Inao Touko
Monma Hiroyuki
Okano Shinji
Itakura Masayuki
Tanaka Tsuneo
Source Title
Breast cancer research and treatment
Volume 134
Issue 1
Start Page 89
End Page 100
Journal Identifire
ISSN 01676806
Descriptions
Innate adjuvant receptors are expressed in immune cells and some types of cancers. If antitumor therapies targeting these receptors are established, it is likely that they will be therapeutically beneficial because antitumor effects and immune-cell activation can be induced simultaneously. In this study, we tested this possibility of using an innate adjuvant receptor ligand, polyinosinic-polycytidylic acid [poly(I:C)], to treat human breast cancer cell lines. Three breast cancer cell lines (MCF-7, MDA-MB-231, and BT-549) were used in this study. Poly(I:C) was transfected into these cancer cells to stimulate melanoma differentiation-associated gene (MDA) 5, which is a cytoplasmic adjuvant receptor. Poly(I:C) transfection significantly reduced the viability of all cell lines in a manner partially dependent on MDA5. Flow cytometeric analyses and immunoblot assays revealed that the antitumor effect depended on both caspase-dependent apoptosis and c-Myc- and cyclinD1-dependent growth arrest. Interestingly, poly(I:C) transfection was accompanied by autophagy, which is thought to protect cancer cells from apoptosis after poly(I:C) transfection. In a xenograft mouse model, local transfection of poly(I:C) significantly inhibited the growth of xenografted MDA-MB-231 cells. Our findings indicate that cytoplasmic delivery of poly(I:C) can induce apoptosis and growth arrest of human breast cancer cells, and that therapy-associated autophagy prevents apoptosis. The results of this study suggest that the innate adjuvant receptors are promising targets and that their ligands could serve as antitumor reagents, which have the potential to simultaneously induce antitumor effects and activate immune cells.
Subjects
Apoptosis ( Other)
Growth arrest ( Other)
Poly(I:C) ( Other)
MDA5 ( Other)
Autophagy ( Other)
Language
eng
Resource Type journal article
Publisher
Springer
Date of Issued 2012-07
Rights
© Springer Science+Business Media, LLC. 2011
Publish Type Accepted Manuscript
Access Rights open access
Relation
[DOI] 10.1007/s10549-011-1930-3
[PMID] 22203435
[NCID] AA10623184