Fisher William E, Wu YuanQing, Amaya Felipe, Berger David H
Michael E. DeBakey Department of Surgery, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas 77030, USA.
J Surg Res. 2002 Jun 1;105(1):58-64. doi: 10.1006/jsre.2002.6450.
Most human pancreatic adenocarcinoma cells do not express somatostatin receptors and somatostatin does not inhibit the growth of these cancers. We have demonstrated previously that somatostatin inhibits the growth of pancreatic cancers expressing somatostatin receptor subtype 2 (SSR2) but not receptor-negative cancers. SSR2 expression may be an important tumor suppressor pathway that is lost in human pancreatic cancer. We hypothesized that SSR2 gene transfer would restore the growth inhibitory response of human pancreatic cancer to somatostatin.
We created adenoviral constructs containing the SSR2 or Lac-Z gene and transfected somatostatin receptor-negative human pancreatic cancer cells (Panc-1). Presence of functional cell surface SSR2 protein was assessed by whole-cell competitive binding assays. Parental cells, Lac-Z-transfected, and SSR2-transfected cells were cultured in the presence and absence of somatostatin. The rate of cell growth was determined by direct cell counting using a hemacytometer (n = 8 wells/group). Cells were analyzed for expression of tumor suppressor proteins by Western blot.
Panc-1 cells transfected with the SSR2 transgene demonstrated high-affinity specific binding of (125)I-somatostatin at physiologic concentrations. Expression of somatostatin receptors caused 60% inhibition of cell growth compared with the Lac-Z virus-treated controls (P < 0.05 by Kruskal-Wallis/Bonferroni). There was no additional inhibition of cell proliferation with exogenous somatostatin. Furthermore, addition of somatostatin ligand antibody did not diminish the effect of SSR2 expression on cell proliferation. Western blot analysis revealed an upregulation of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p27 in the SSR2-transfected cells.
Expression of SSR2 by human pancreatic cancer causes significant slowing of cell division by a mechanism independent of somatostatin. The mechanism may involve upregulation of known tumor suppressor proteins. Restoration of SSR2 gene expression deserves further study as a potential gene therapy strategy in human pancreatic cancer.
大多数人类胰腺腺癌细胞不表达生长抑素受体,生长抑素也不抑制这些癌症的生长。我们之前已经证明,生长抑素可抑制表达生长抑素受体亚型2(SSR2)的胰腺癌的生长,但对受体阴性的癌症无效。SSR2表达可能是人类胰腺癌中缺失的一种重要的肿瘤抑制途径。我们推测,SSR2基因转移将恢复人类胰腺癌对生长抑素的生长抑制反应。
我们构建了含有SSR2或Lac-Z基因的腺病毒载体,并转染生长抑素受体阴性的人类胰腺癌细胞(Panc-1)。通过全细胞竞争性结合试验评估功能性细胞表面SSR2蛋白的存在。在有和没有生长抑素的情况下培养亲本细胞、Lac-Z转染细胞和SSR2转染细胞。使用血细胞计数器通过直接细胞计数确定细胞生长速率(每组n = 8孔)。通过蛋白质印迹分析细胞中肿瘤抑制蛋白的表达。
用SSR2转基因转染的Panc-1细胞在生理浓度下表现出对(125)I-生长抑素的高亲和力特异性结合。与Lac-Z病毒处理的对照相比,生长抑素受体的表达导致细胞生长抑制60%(通过Kruskal-Wallis/Bonferroni检验,P < 0.05)。外源性生长抑素对细胞增殖没有额外的抑制作用。此外,添加生长抑素配体抗体并没有减弱SSR2表达对细胞增殖的影响。蛋白质印迹分析显示,SSR2转染细胞中细胞周期蛋白依赖性激酶抑制剂p27上调。
人类胰腺癌中SSR2的表达通过一种不依赖生长抑素的机制导致细胞分裂显著减慢。该机制可能涉及已知肿瘤抑制蛋白的上调。恢复SSR2基因表达作为人类胰腺癌潜在的基因治疗策略值得进一步研究。