In vivo Effects in Melanoma of ROCK Inhibition-Induced FasL Overexpression.

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Serval ID
serval:BIB_047E8FEEC9E3
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Title
In vivo Effects in Melanoma of ROCK Inhibition-Induced FasL Overexpression.
Journal
Frontiers In Oncology
Author(s)
Teiti I., Florie B., Pich C., Gence R., Lajoie-Mazenc I., Rochaix P., Favre G., Tilkin-Mariamé A.F.
ISSN
2234-943X (Electronic)
ISSN-L
2234-943X
Publication state
Published
Issued date
07/2015
Volume
5
Pages
156
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: epublish
Abstract
Ectopic Fas-ligand (FasL) expression in tumor cells is responsible for both tumor escape through tumor counterattack of Fas-positive infiltrating lymphocytes and tumor rejection though inflammatory and immune responses. We have previously shown that RhoA GTPase and its effector ROCK negatively control FasL membrane expression in murine melanoma B16F10 cells. In this study, we found that B16F10 treatment with the ROCK inhibitor H1152 reduced melanoma development in vivo through FasL membrane overexpression. Although H1152 treatment did not reduce tumor growth in vitro, pretreatment of tumor cells with this inhibitor delayed tumor appearance, and slowed tumor growth in C57BL/6 immunocompetent mice. Thanks to the use of mice-bearing mutated Fas receptors (B6/lpr), we found that reduced tumor growth, observed in immunocompetent mice, was linked to FasL overexpression induced by H1152 treatment. Tumor growth analysis in immunosuppressed NUDE and IFN-γ-KO mice highlighted major roles for T lymphocytes and IFN-γ in the H1152-induced tumor growth reduction. Histological analyses of subcutaneous tumors, obtained from untreated versus H1152-treated B16F10 cells, showed that H1152 pretreatment induced a strong intratumoral infiltration of leukocytes. Cytofluorometric analysis showed that among these leukocytes, the number of activated CD8 lymphocytes was increased. Moreover, their antibody-induced depletion highlighted their main responsibility in tumor growth reduction. Subcutaneous tumor growth was also reduced by repeated intravenous injections of a clinical ROCK inhibitor, Fasudil. Finally, H1152-induced ROCK inhibition also reduced pulmonary metastasis implantation independently of T cell-mediated immune response. Altogether, our data suggest that ROCK inhibitors could become interesting pharmacological molecules for melanoma immunotherapy.
Pubmed
Open Access
Yes
Create date
18/02/2016 12:15
Last modification date
19/07/2023 6:56
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