7 research outputs found

    Gene Expression Analysis of an EGFR Indirectly Related Pathway Identified PTEN and MMP9 as Reliable Diagnostic Markers for Human Glial Tumor Specimens

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    In this study the mRNA levels of five EGFR indirectly related genes, EGFR, HB-EGF, ADAM17, PTEN, and MMP9, have been assessed by Real-time PCR in a panel of 37 glioblastoma multiforme specimens and in 5 normal brain samples; as a result, in glioblastoma, ADAM17 and PTEN expression was significantly lower than in normal brain samples, and, in particular, a statistically significant inverse correlation was found between PTEN and MMP9 mRNA levels. To verify if this correlation was conserved in gliomas, PTEN and MMP9 expression was further investigated in an additional panel of 16 anaplastic astrocytoma specimens and, in parallel, in different human normal and astrocytic tumor cell lines. In anaplastic astrocytomas PTEN expression was significantly higher than in glioblastoma multiforme, but no significant correlation was found between PTEN and MMP9 expression. PTEN and MMP9 mRNA levels were also employed to identify subgroups of specimens within the different glioma malignancy grades and to define a gene expression-based diagnostic classification scheme. In conclusion, this gene expression survey highlighted that the combined measurement of PTEN and MMP9 transcripts might represent a novel reliable tool for the differential diagnosis of high-grade gliomas, and it also suggested a functional link involving these genes in glial tumors

    The doppel (Dpl) Protein Influences In Vitro Migration Capability in Astrocytoma-Derived Cells

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    Doppel (Dpl) protein is the paralogue of the cellular prion (PrPC) protein. In humans, Dpl is expressed almost exclusively in testis where it is involved in spermatogenesis. Recently, the protein has been described to be ectopically expressed in astrocytomas and its potential association to the brain tumor malignancy progression has been advanced. In this study, we aimed to investigate in vitro the potential involvement of Dpl in the tumor cell migration: to this purpose, Dpl expression was reduced in the IPDDC-A2 astrocytoma-derived cell line, by means of antisense and siRNA approaches; migration rates were then evaluated by means of a scratch wound healing assay. As a result, the cellular migration was sensibly reduced after Dpl silencing. Following a complementary approach, in HeLa cells, showing very low endogenous Dpl expression, the protein expression was induced by transfection and stabilization of an eukaryotic expression vector containing the doppel gene coding sequence. These stably Dpl-overexpressing cells revealed a significant increase in the migration rate, compared to untreated and control cells. In addition, Dpl-forced expression induced substantial changes in the cell morphology. Of note, in these cells, viability examination by means of tetrazolium-based assay did not reveal differences in the proliferation; on the contrary, a variation in density-dependent growth, leading to an increase of cell contact inhibition was highlighted. These results, in conclusion, might suggest a potential and functional role for Dpl in tumor cells migratory and morphological behaviours and address to future gene-targeted therapeutic interventions

    Altered cellular distribution and sub-cellular sorting of doppel (Dpl) protein in human astrocytoma cell lines

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    Abstract. Doppel, a prion-like protein, is a GPI-membrane anchored protein generally not expressed in the Central Nervous System (CNS) of different mammalian species, including human. Nevertheless, in astrocytomas, a particular kind of glial tumors, the doppel encoding gene (PRND) is over-expressed and the corresponding protein product (Dpl) is ectopically localized in the cytoplasm of the tumor cells. In this study we have analysed the sub-cellular localization of Dpl using double-immunofluorescence staining and confocal microscopy examinations in two astrocytoma-derived human cell lines (IPDDC-A2 and D384-MG). Our results confirmed that Dpl is localized in the cytoplasm of the astrocytoma cells and indicated that it is mostly associated with Lamp-1 and Limp-2 positive lysosomal vesicles and, marginally, to the Golgi apparatus and other cellular organelles. Noticeably, none of the examined tumor cells showed a membrane-Dpl localization. The membrane-associated Dpl expression was restored after the transfection of the astrocytoma cells with mutated Dpl-expression vectors in its glycosylation sites. Additionally, Dpl showed altered expression and traffic using the acidotropic agent ammonium chloride, leading to the accumulation of Dpl in nascent exocytic vesicles. Altogether, these results indicated that in the astrocytic tumor cells Dpl has an altered biosynthetic trafficking, likely derived from abnormal post-translational processes: these modifications do not permit the localization of Dpl in correspondence of the plasma membrane and lead to its intracellular accumulation in the lysosomes. In these proteolytic compartments, the astrocytic tumor cells might provide to the degradation of the excess of a potentially cytotoxic Dpl product

    Silencing of cellular prion protein (PrPC) expression by DNA-antisense oligonucleotides induces autophagy-dependent cell death in glioma cells

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    Malignant gliomas are the most common and lethal primary central nervous system neoplasms. Several intriguing lines of evidence have recently emerged indicating that the cellular prion protein (PrPC) may exert neuro- and cyto-protective functions: PrPC overexpression protects cultured neurons and also tumor cell lines exposed to various pro-apoptotic stimuli while, on the contrary, PrPC silencing sensitizes Adriamycin-resistant human breast carcinoma cells to TRAIL-mediated cell death. In order to determine if PrPC is involved in the resistance of glial tumors to cell death, the effects of cellular prion protein downregulation by antisense approach were investigated in different human malignant glioma cell lines. PrPC downregulation induced profound morphological changes and significant cell death. In addition, a significant tumor volume reduction was noted after PrPC silencing in a EGFP-GL261 glioma murine model. Investigations of the molecular effects induced by PrPC silencing were carried out on T98G human glioma cells by analysing autophagic as well as typical apoptotic markers (nuclear morphology, caspase-3/7, p53 and PARP-1). The results indicated that apoptosis was not induced after PrPC downregulation while, on the contrary, electron microscopy analysis, and an accumulation of GFP-LC3-II in autophagosomal membranes of GFP-LC3 transfected cells, indicated a predominant activation of autophagy. PrPC silencing also led to induction of LC3-II, increase in Beclin-1 and a concomitant decrease in p62, Bcl-2 and in the phosphorylation of 4E-BP1, a target of mTOR autophagy signaling. In conclusion, our results show for the first time that interfering with the cellular prion protein expression could modulate autophagy-dependent cell death pathways in glial tumor cells
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