Synthetic oligodeoxynucleotides expressing CpG motifs (CpG-ODN) are a TLR9 agonist that can enhance the anti-tumor activity of DNA-damaging chemotherapy and radiation therapy in preclinical mouse models. We hypothesized that the success of these combinations is related to the ability of CpG-ODN to modulate genes involved in DNA-repair. We conducted an in silico analysis of genes implicated in DNA-repair in datasets obtained from murine colon carcinoma cells in mice injected intratumorally with CpG-ODN and from splenocytes in mice treated intraperitoneally with CpG-ODN. CpG-ODN treatment caused down-regulation of DNA-repair genes in tumors. Microarray analyses of human IGROV-1 ovarian carcinoma xenografts in mice treated i.p. with CpG-ODN confirmed in silico findings. When combined with the DNA-damaging drug cisplatin, CpG-ODN significantly increased the lifespan of mice compared to individual treatments. In contrast, CpG-ODN led to an up-regulation of genes involved in DNA-repair in immune cells. Cisplatin-treated ovarian carcinoma patients as well as anthracycline-treated breast cancer patients that are classified as "CpG-like" for the level of expression of CpG-ODN modulated DNA-repair genes have a better outcome when compared to patients classified as "CpG-untreated-like", indicating the relevance of these genes in the tumor cell response to DNA-damaging drugs. Taken together, the findings provide evidence that the tumor microenvironment can sensitize cancer cells to DNA-damaging chemotherapy, thereby expanding the benefits of CpG-ODN therapy beyond induction of a strong immune response.

TLR9-agonists oppositely modulate DNA-repair genes in tumor versus immune cells and enhance chemotherapy effects / M. Sommariva, L. De Cecco, M. De Cesare, L. Sfondrini, S. Mènard, C. Melani, D. Delia, N. Zaffaroni, G. Pratesi, V. Uva, E. Tagliabue, A. Balsari. - In: CANCER RESEARCH. - ISSN 0008-5472. - 71:20(2011 Oct 15), pp. 6382-6390. [10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-11-1285]

TLR9-agonists oppositely modulate DNA-repair genes in tumor versus immune cells and enhance chemotherapy effects

M. Sommariva
Primo
;
L. Sfondrini;V. Uva;A. Balsari
Ultimo
2011

Abstract

Synthetic oligodeoxynucleotides expressing CpG motifs (CpG-ODN) are a TLR9 agonist that can enhance the anti-tumor activity of DNA-damaging chemotherapy and radiation therapy in preclinical mouse models. We hypothesized that the success of these combinations is related to the ability of CpG-ODN to modulate genes involved in DNA-repair. We conducted an in silico analysis of genes implicated in DNA-repair in datasets obtained from murine colon carcinoma cells in mice injected intratumorally with CpG-ODN and from splenocytes in mice treated intraperitoneally with CpG-ODN. CpG-ODN treatment caused down-regulation of DNA-repair genes in tumors. Microarray analyses of human IGROV-1 ovarian carcinoma xenografts in mice treated i.p. with CpG-ODN confirmed in silico findings. When combined with the DNA-damaging drug cisplatin, CpG-ODN significantly increased the lifespan of mice compared to individual treatments. In contrast, CpG-ODN led to an up-regulation of genes involved in DNA-repair in immune cells. Cisplatin-treated ovarian carcinoma patients as well as anthracycline-treated breast cancer patients that are classified as "CpG-like" for the level of expression of CpG-ODN modulated DNA-repair genes have a better outcome when compared to patients classified as "CpG-untreated-like", indicating the relevance of these genes in the tumor cell response to DNA-damaging drugs. Taken together, the findings provide evidence that the tumor microenvironment can sensitize cancer cells to DNA-damaging chemotherapy, thereby expanding the benefits of CpG-ODN therapy beyond induction of a strong immune response.
No
English
toll-like receptor-9; CpG-oligodeoxynucleotides; cancer-therapy; in-vivo; expression; PF-3512676; activation; signatures; carcinoma; responses
Settore MED/04 - Patologia Generale
Settore BIO/17 - Istologia
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Ricerca applicata
Pubblicazione scientifica
15-ott-2011
American Association of Cancer Research
71
20
6382
6390
9
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
TLR9-agonists oppositely modulate DNA-repair genes in tumor versus immune cells and enhance chemotherapy effects / M. Sommariva, L. De Cecco, M. De Cesare, L. Sfondrini, S. Mènard, C. Melani, D. Delia, N. Zaffaroni, G. Pratesi, V. Uva, E. Tagliabue, A. Balsari. - In: CANCER RESEARCH. - ISSN 0008-5472. - 71:20(2011 Oct 15), pp. 6382-6390. [10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-11-1285]
reserved
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
12
262
Article (author)
Periodico con Impact Factor
M. Sommariva, L. De Cecco, M. De Cesare, L. Sfondrini, S. Mènard, C. Melani, D. Delia, N. Zaffaroni, G. Pratesi, V. Uva, E. Tagliabue, A. Balsari
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/162734
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