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Progressive resistance of BTK-143 osteosarcoma cells to Apo2L/TRAIL-induced apoptosis is mediated by acquisition of DcR2/TRAIL-R4 expression: resensitisation with chemotherapy
Authors
A Ashkenazi
A Ashkenazi
+45 more
A Evdokiou
A Evdokiou
A Labrinidis
A Nesterov
A Suliman
A Truneh
B Gliniak
D M Findlay
D Siegmund
G J Atkins
G Pan
G Pan
G Pan
GJ Atkins
H Walczak
H Walczak
JG Emery
JP Sheridan
K Newton
K Seki
L Bin
M Degli Esposti
M Dejosez
M Nagane
MA Degli Esposti
MA Degli-Esposti
MM Keane
PM Chaudhary
R Ravi
S Bouralexis
S Hay
S Lacour
S Nagata
S Plenchette
S Roy
SA Marsters
SB Gibson
T Nguyen
T Yamanaka
TS Griffith
V Medina
VH Bramwell
XD Zhang
XD Zhang
Y Mizutani
Publication date
1 January 2003
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Doi
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
© 2003 Cancer Research UKApo2 ligand (Apo2L, also known as TRAIL) is a member of the tumour necrosis factor (TNF) family of cytokines that selectively induces the death of cancer cells, but not of normal cells. We observed that recombinant Apo2L/TRAIL was proapoptotic in early-passage BTK-143 osteogenic sarcoma cells, inducing 80% cell death during a 24 h treatment period. Apo2L/TRAIL-induced apoptosis was blocked by caspase inhibition. With increasing passage in culture, BTK-143 cells became progressively resistant to the apoptotic effects of Apo2L/TRAIL . RNA and flow cytometric analysis demonstrated that resistance to Apo2L/TRAIL was paralleled by progressive acquisition of the decoy receptor, DcR2. Blocking of DcR2 function with a specific anti-DcR2 antibody restored sensitivity to Apo2L/TRAIL in a dose-dependent manner. Importantly, treatment of resistant cells with the chemotherapeutic agents doxorubicin, cisplatin and etoposide reversed the resistance to Apo2L/TRAIL, which was associated with drug-induced upregulation of mRNA encoding the death receptors DR4 and DR5. BTK-143 cells thus represent a useful model system to investigate both the mechanisms of acquisition of resistance of tumour cells to Apo2L/TRAIL and the use of conventional drugs and novel agents to overcome resistance to Apo2L/TRAIL.S Bouralexis, D M Findlay, G J Atkins, A Labrinidis, S Hay & A Evdokio
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