Departments of Gynecologic Oncology, Cancer Biology, and Experimental Therapeutics, and Center for RNA Interference and Non-coding RNA, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas, USA.
Clin Cancer Res. 2011 Jun 1;17(11):3649-59. doi: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-10-2441. Epub 2011 Apr 29.
Increased adrenergic activity in response to chronic stress is known to promote tumor growth by stimulating the tumor microenvironment. The focus of the current study was to determine whether dopamine, an inhibitory catecholamine, could block the effects of chronic stress on tumor growth.
Expression of dopamine receptors (DR1-DR5) was analyzed by reverse transcriptase-PCR and by Western blotting. In vitro effects of dopamine on cell viability, apoptosis, and migration were examined. For in vivo therapy, murine and human DR2-siRNAs were incorporated into chitosan nanoparticles (CH-NP).
In this model of chronic stress, tumoral norepinephrine levels remained elevated whereas dopamine levels were significantly decreased compared with nonstressed animals. Daily restraint stress resulted in significantly increased tumor growth in both immunodeficient (SKOV3ip1 and HeyA8) and immunocompetent (ID8) ovarian cancer models. This increase was completely blocked with daily dopamine treatment. Dopamine treatment also blocked the stress-induced increase in angiogenesis. Endothelial and ovarian cancer cells expressed all dopamine receptors except for the lack of DR3 expression in ovarian cancer cells. DR2 was responsible for the inhibitory effects of dopamine on tumor growth and microvessel density as well as the stimulatory effect on apoptosis, as the DR2 antagonist eticlopride reversed these effects. Dopamine significantly inhibited cell viability and stimulated apoptosis in vitro. Moreover, dopamine reduced cyclic AMP levels and inhibited norepinephrine and vascular permeability factor/VEGF-induced Src kinase activation.
Dopamine depletion under chronic stress conditions creates a permissive microenvironment for tumor growth that can be reversed by dopamine replacement.
已知慢性应激引起的肾上腺素能活性增加通过刺激肿瘤微环境促进肿瘤生长。目前研究的重点是确定抑制儿茶酚胺多巴胺是否可以阻断慢性应激对肿瘤生长的影响。
通过逆转录-聚合酶链反应和 Western blot 分析多巴胺受体(DR1-DR5)的表达。研究了多巴胺对细胞活力、细胞凋亡和细胞迁移的体外作用。对于体内治疗,将鼠和人 DR2-siRNA 整合到壳聚糖纳米颗粒(CH-NP)中。
在这种慢性应激模型中,肿瘤去甲肾上腺素水平保持升高,而与未应激动物相比,多巴胺水平显著降低。每日束缚应激导致免疫缺陷(SKOV3ip1 和 HeyA8)和免疫功能正常(ID8)卵巢癌细胞模型中的肿瘤生长显著增加。这种增加可以通过每日多巴胺治疗完全阻断。多巴胺治疗还阻断了应激诱导的血管生成增加。内皮细胞和卵巢癌细胞均表达所有多巴胺受体,除卵巢癌细胞缺乏 DR3 表达外。DR2 负责多巴胺对肿瘤生长和微血管密度的抑制作用,以及对细胞凋亡的刺激作用,因为 DR2 拮抗剂 eticlopride 逆转了这些作用。多巴胺在体外显著抑制细胞活力并刺激细胞凋亡。此外,多巴胺降低 cAMP 水平并抑制去甲肾上腺素和血管通透性因子/VEGF 诱导的Src 激酶激活。
慢性应激条件下多巴胺耗竭会导致肿瘤生长的许可微环境,这种微环境可以通过多巴胺替代来逆转。