4.5 Article

Temozolomide Modifies Caveolin-1 Expression in Experimental Malignant Gliomas In Vitro and In Vivo

Journal

TRANSLATIONAL ONCOLOGY
Volume 4, Issue 2, Pages 92-100

Publisher

NEOPLASIA PRESS
DOI: 10.1593/tlo.10205

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Funding

  1. Fonds National de la Recherche Scientifique (Brussels, Belgium)

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BACKGROUND: Caveolin-1 is a protein that displays promotive versus preventive roles in cancer progression according to circumstances. Temozolomide (TMZ) is the standard chemotherapeutic to treat glioma patients. The present work aims to characterize TMZ-induced effects on caveolin-1 expression in glioma cells. METHODS: Human astroglioma (U373 and T98G) and oligodendroglioma (Hs683) cell lines were used in vitro as well as in vivo orthotopic xenografts (Hs683 and U373) into the brains of immunocompromised mice. In vitro TMZ-induced effects on protein expression and cellular localization were determined by Western blot analysis and on the actin cytoskeleton organization by means of immunofluorescence approaches. In vivo TMZ-induced effects in caveolin-1 expression in human glioma xenografts were monitored by means of immunohistochemistry. RESULTS: TMZ modified caveolin-1 expression and localization in vitro and in vivo after an administration schedule that slightly, if at all, impaired cell growth characteristics in vitro. Caveolin-1 by itself (at a 100-ng/ml concentration) was able to significantly reduce invasiveness (Boyden chambers) of the three human glioma cell lines. The TMZ-induced modification in caveolin-1 expression in flotation/raft compartments was paralleled by altered Cyr61 and beta(1) integrin expression, two elements that have already been reported to collaborate with caveolin-1 in regulating glioma cell biology, and all these features led to profound reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton. An experimental Src kinase inhibitor, AZD0530, almost completely antagonized the TMZ-induced modulation in caveolin-1 expression. CONCLUSION: TMZ modifies caveolin-1 expression in vitro and in vivo in glioma cells, a feature that directly affects glioma cell migration properties.

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