The sodium/iodide symporter (NIS) mediates iodide uptake in lactating breast tissue and is expressed in some breast cancers. We have previously demonstrated that all-trans retinoic acid (tRA) stimulates NIS gene expression and the selective cytotoxic effect of beta-emitting radioiodide-131 ((131)I) in both in vitro and in vivo MCF-7 breast cancer cell systems. We studied the ability of natural and synthetic retinoids, in combination with other nuclear receptor ligands, to achieve greater and more sustained induction of NIS in MCF-7 cells and enhance (131)I-mediated cytotoxicity. Selective stimulation of retinoic acid receptor (RAR) beta/gamma produced marked NIS induction; and selective stimulation of RARalpha, RARgamma, or retinoid X receptor produced more modest induction. Maximal NIS induction was seen with 9-cis retinoic acid and AGN190168, a RAR beta/gamma-agonist. Dexamethasone (Dex), but not the other nuclear receptor ligands, in combination with tRA synergistically induced iodide uptake and NIS mRNA expression, predominantly by prolonging NIS mRNA half-life. The addition of Dex reduced the EC(50) of tRA for NIS stimulation to approximately 7%, such that 10(-7) m tRA with addition of Dex enhanced iodide uptake and selective cytotoxicity of (131)I greater than 10(-6) m tRA alone. AGN190168 combined with Dex synergistically increased iodide uptake and significantly prolonged induction (5 d) of iodide uptake compared with that induced by the combination of tRA/Dex or 9-cis retinoic acid/Dex. The addition of Dex reduced the effective dose of retinoid and prolonged the induction of NIS, especially with AGN190168, suggesting higher efficacy of (131)I after combination treatment.
The sodium/iodide symporter (NIS) gene is highly expressed in the thyroid gland and is important for the diagnosis and radioiodide therapy of differentiated thyroid cancers. We investigated a human NIS (hNIS) gene 5'-far-upstream enhancer (hNUE) (-9847 to -8968). The hNUE is TSH responsive in both FRTL-5 cells and primary normal thyroid cells, but not in human papillary thyroid cancer cells (BHP cells). The hNUE enhanced expression of the basal hNIS promoter 15-fold and required both a Pax-8 binding site and a cAMP response element (CRE)-like sequence for full activity. The hNUE activated transcription in a thyroid-selective and cAMP-dependent manner, mediated by both protein kinase A (PKA)-dependent and PKA-independent pathways. Pax-8 and two CRE-like sequence binding proteins bind to the hNUE. Supershift binding assay indicated that one of the CRE-like sequence binding protein(s) was CRE-binding protein-1, activation transcription factor-1, and/or CRE modulator, and the other was an unknown factor(s) that is absent in BHP 2-7 cells. A far-upstream enhancer is important for hNIS regulation in the thyroid. Deficient CRE-like sequence binding protein(s) that bind to the hNUE in normal thyroid cells may be responsible for reduced NIS gene expression in some thyroid carcinomas.
Lactating breast tissue and some breast cancers express the sodium/ iodide symporter (NIS) and concentrate iodide. We recently demonstrated that all-trans retinoic acid (tRA) induces both NIS gene expression and iodide accumulation in vitro in well-differentiated human breast cancer cells (MCF-7). In the present study, we investigated the in vivo efficacy and specificity of tRA-stimulated iodide accumulation in mouse breast cancer models. Immunodeficient mice with MCF-7 xenograft tumors were treated with systemic tRA for 5 days. Iodide accumulation in the xenograft tumors was markedly increased, ϳ15-fold greater than levels without treatment, and the effects were tRA dose dependent. Iodide accumulation in other organs was not significantly influenced by tRA treatment. Significant induction of NIS mRNA and protein in the xenograft tumors was observed after tRA treatment. Iodide accumulation and NIS mRNA expression were also selectively induced in breast cancer tissues in transgenic mice expressing the oncogene, polyoma virus middle T antigen. These data demonstrate selective induction of functional NIS in breast cancer by tRA. Treatment with short-term systemic retinoic acid, followed by radioiodide administration, is a potential tool in the diagnosis and treatment of some differentiated breast cancer.
Fifty seven hospital workers received influenza vaccine in November 2003, and the serum HI antibody titer was determined before, 2 and 4 weeks after the vaccination. Thirty seven were vaccinated in November, 2002 consecutively (the repeated vaccination group), and the remaining 20 had not been vaccinated in the previous year (the single vaccination group). Six of the repeated vaccination group received both influenza and hepatitis B vaccination in September, 2004 and the antibody responses were examined 2 weeks later. Two and four weeks after the 2003-vaccination, the HI antibody titers to A/H1N1, A/H3N2, and B in the repeated vaccination group were significantly lower than in the single vaccination group (P < 0.05). This phenomenon had no relation to the pre-vaccination HI antibody titer. The antibody response was low to repeated influenza vaccination, but normal to hepatitis B vaccine in six subjects who had a second vaccination in 2004, showing that this depressed response was influenza-specific. These results suggest that the decreased HI antibody response to repeated influenza vaccination was affected mainly by the previous vaccination per se rather than by the pre-existing antibody titer.
Luciferase genes are widely used as reporters to analyze promoter and regulatory elements. We found that a luciferase reporter gene vector with a modified firefly luciferase gene (luc+), but not Renilla luciferase (Rluc), was induced by all-trans retinoic acid (tRA) in the MCF-7 breast cancer cell line. tRA (5 x 10(-6) M) increased luciferase activity of the pGL3 promoter vector (containing luc+) up to approximately 3.8-fold in MCF-7 cells, but not in LNCaP prostate cancer cells or JEG-3 choriocarcinoma cells. Chimeric plasmids were constructed and showed that tRA-induction required the luc+ gene, but not any specific promoter or vector sequence. Time course and dose-response studies of tRA-induction indicated that longer treatment (> 24h) and higher tRA dose (> 10(-6) M) were required for luc+ induction compared with those for a positive retinoic acid response element (maximum induction at 6 h and 10(-8) M tRA). Studies with the translation inhibitor, cycloheximide, indicated the half-life of the luc+ protein was increased from 9.7 +/- 1.5 to 22.1 +/- 3.1 h with tRA treatment. Other retinoids, TTNPB, a retinoic acid receptor beta/gamma-specific ligand, and a retinoid X receptor ligand, did not significantly increase luc+ expression. Caution is needed in analysis of retinoid responsive gene regulation with the luciferase reporter system in MCF-7 cells, especially at high retinoid concentrations.
The use of centrifugation (700 x g, 60 min) in a plaque assay markedly increased (mean, 2.9-fold) the infectivity of all 42 influenza virus strains tested, compared with no centrifugation. Of 13 influenza virus strains isolated from 390 clinical specimens, 9 (69%) were efficiently isolated by the centrifugation assay compared with conventional culture methods. The centrifugation assay may be useful for isolating the influenza virus from clinical specimens.
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