The detection of renal tumors has increased significantly over recent years resulting in a greater demand for novel, minimally invasive techniques. Cryoablation has emerged as a valuable treatment modality for the management of renal cancer. In an effort to detail the effects of freezing in renal cancer, the human renal cancer (RCC) cell line, 786-O, was evaluated in vitro. 786-O cells were exposed to a range of freezing temperatures from -5 to -40 degrees C and compared to non-frozen controls. The data show that freezing to -5 degrees C did not affect 786-O cell viability, while -10 degrees C, -15 degrees C, and -20 degrees C results in a significant loss of viability (23, 70, and 91%, respectively). A complete loss of cell viability was evident at temperatures of -25 degrees C and colder. Following this analysis, variables involved in the success of cryoablation were investigated. For each of the temperatures tested, extended freeze hold times and passive thawing rates resulted in more extensive cell damage. Additionally, a double freeze-thaw cycle significantly increased cell death compared to a single cycle (62% vs. 22% at -10 degrees C; 89% vs. 63% at -15 degrees C, respectively). While these variables play an important part in the effective application of cryoablation, a molecular understanding of the cell death involved is critical to improving efficacy. Apoptotic inhibition afforded 12% (-10 degrees C), 25% (-15 degrees C), and 11% (-20 degrees C) protection following freezing. Using fluorescence microscopy analysis, the results demonstrated that apoptosis peaked at six hours post-thaw. Next, apoptotic initiating agents including 5-FU and resveratrol (RVT) applied prior to freezing exposure resulted in a significant increase in cell death compared to either application alone. Importantly, the combination of RVT and freezing was noticeably less effective when applied to normal renal cells. The results herein demonstrate the efficacy of freezing and describe a novel therapeutic model for the treatment of renal cancer that may distinguish between cancer and normal cells.
Actopaxin is an actin and paxillin binding protein that localizes to focal adhesions. It regulates cell spreading and is phosphorylated during mitosis. Herein, we identify a role for actopaxin phosphorylation in cell spreading and migration. Stable clones of U2OS cells expressing actopaxin wild-type (WT), nonphosphorylatable, and phosphomimetic mutants were developed to evaluate actopaxin function. All proteins targeted to focal adhesions, however the nonphosphorylatable mutant inhibited spreading whereas the phosphomimetic mutant cells spread more efficiently than WT cells. Endogenous and WT actopaxin, but not the nonphosphorylatable mutant, were phosphorylated in vivo during cell adhesion/spreading. Expression of the nonphosphorylatable actopaxin mutant significantly reduced cell migration, whereas expression of the phosphomimetic increased cell migration in scrape wound and Boyden chamber migration assays. In vitro kinase assays demonstrate that extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase phosphorylates actopaxin, and treatment of U2OS cells with the MEK1 inhibitor UO126 inhibited adhesion-induced phosphorylation of actopaxin and also inhibited cell migration.
Adjuvant therapies contribute to the successful treatment of cancer. Our previous reports have shown that combining cryoablation with cytotoxic agents enhances cell death. Tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) is a cytotoxic agent that preferentially induces apoptosis in a variety of human cancer cells. Human prostate cancer cells (PC-3) are resistant to many cytodestructive agents, including cryoablation and TRAIL. Here, we evaluated the effects of TRAIL combined with cryoablation on PC-3 and normal prostate (RWPE-1) cell death. Exposure of PC-3 cells to freezing (À101C) or TRAIL (500ng/ml) results in minimal cell death, whereas a complete loss of viability is observed with the simultaneous combination. The synergistic effect was found to be due to a marked increase in apoptosis. Western blot analysis revealed a significant level of caspase-8 and -3 cleavage between 12 and 24 h post-exposure. Caspase activation assays provided similar results and also indicated a role for caspase-9. Inhibitors to caspase-8 and -9 along with a pan-caspase inhibitor were incorporated to determine which pathway was necessary for the combined efficacy. Inhibition of caspase-8 significantly blocked the combination-induced cell death compared to cells that did not receive the inhibitor (63% compared to 10% viable). The addition of the caspase-9 inhibitor resulted in only a minimal protection. Importantly, the combination was not effective when applied to normal prostate cells. The results describe a novel therapeutic model for the treatment of prostate cancer and provide support for future in vivo studies.
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