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Inhibition
of epidermal growth factor receptor-associated tyrosine kinase blocks
glioblastoma invasion of the brain
Penar PL, Khoshyomn S, Bhushan A, Tritton
TR
Division of Neurosurgery, University of Vermont College of Medicine, Burlington,
USA
Objective.
Glioblastoma multiforme is a malignant primary brain tumor associated
with short patient survival despite aggressive treatment, in part because of its
propensity to aggressively infiltrate into brain tissue.
Glioblastoma multiforme
is also unique because it is the only nonepithelial human tumor for which
excessive activation of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) has been
consistently linked to tumor growth and patient survival, and EGFR activation
promotes glioblastoma multiforme infiltration in vitro.
Methods.
Cocultures of
human glioblastoma spheroids (derived from three separate patients) and fetal
rat brain aggregates were examined for infiltration using confocal microscopy,
in the presence of 0 to 100 mumol/L genistein, a tyrosine kinase (TK) inhibitor,
and 3 mumol/L tyrphostin A25, a specific EGFR-TK inhibitor.
Results.
Infiltration (not attachment) was completely inhibited by genistein at 10 mumol/L,
the IC20 for monolayer growth inhibition in two cell lines.
Tyrphostin A25 at 3
mumol/L (the IC20 for monolayers) reduced invasion in a third cell line from
38.8 +/- 6.1% invasion-hour per hour (n = 5) to 2.9 +/- 1.2% invasion-hour per
hour (n = 6) (P = 0.0002, two-tailed t test, 93% inhibition), and from 0.54 +/-
0.065% per hour (slope) to 0.028 +/- 0.018% per hour (P = 0.00001, 95%
inhibition).
Maximal percent invasion was reduced from 100 +/- 0 to 7.4 +/- 5.6%
of the fetal rat brain aggregate.
No change was detected in EGFR-associated
tyrosine phosphorylation at those doses in monolayers by 32P immunolabeling,
consistent with the known effects of low concentrations of TK inhibitors.
An
increase in expression of wild-type and truncated EGFR was demonstrated by
Western blotting.
Invasion was equally well inhibited by a monoclonal antibody
to the high-affinity ligand binding domain of EGFR and not by antibody to an
inactive domain.
Conclusion.
Our observations support the role of EGFR
activation as a determinant by which glioblastoma invades normal brain tissue,
and we show that invasion can be effectively inhibited at much lower
concentrations of TK inhibitors than are necessary for growth suppression.
PMID: 8971836 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Source:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=8971836&dopt=Abstract
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