University of Leicester
Browse
A caspase-3 'death-switch' in colorectal cancer cells for induced and synchronous tumor apoptosis in vitro and in vivo facilitates the development of minimally invasive cell death biomarkers..pdf (1.64 MB)

A caspase-3 'death-switch' in colorectal cancer cells for induced and synchronous tumor apoptosis in vitro and in vivo facilitates the development of minimally invasive cell death biomarkers

Download (1.64 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2015-07-29, 09:13 authored by K. L. Simpson, C. Cawthorne, C. Zhou, C. L. Hodgkinson, M. J. Walker, F. Trapani, M. Kadirvel, G. Brown, M. J. Dawson, Marion MacFarlane, K. J. Williams, A. D. Whetton, C. Dive
Novel anticancer drugs targeting key apoptosis regulators have been developed and are undergoing clinical trials. Pharmacodynamic biomarkers to define the optimum dose of drug that provokes tumor apoptosis are in demand; acquisition of longitudinal tumor biopsies is a significant challenge and minimally invasive biomarkers are required. Considering this, we have developed and validated a preclinical 'death-switch' model for the discovery of secreted biomarkers of tumour apoptosis using in vitro proteomics and in vivo evaluation of the novel imaging probe [[superscript: 18]F]ML-10 for non-invasive detection of apoptosis using positron emission tomography (PET). The 'death-switch' is a constitutively active mutant caspase-3 that is robustly induced by doxycycline to drive synchronous apoptosis in human colorectal cancer cells in vitro or grown as tumor xenografts. Death-switch induction caused caspase-dependent apoptosis between 3 and 24 hours in vitro and regression of 'death-switched' xenografts occurred within 24 h correlating with the percentage of apoptotic cells in tumor and levels of an established cell death biomarker (cleaved cytokeratin-18) in the blood. We sought to define secreted biomarkers of tumor apoptosis from cultured cells using Discovery Isobaric Tag proteomics, which may provide candidates to validate in blood. Early after caspase-3 activation, levels of normally secreted proteins were decreased (e.g. Gelsolin and Midkine) and proteins including CD44 and High Mobility Group protein B1 (HMGB1) that were released into cell culture media in vitro were also identified in the bloodstream of mice bearing death-switched tumors. We also exemplify the utility of the death-switch model for the validation of apoptotic imaging probes using [[superscript: 18]F]ML-10, a PET tracer currently in clinical trials. Results showed increased tracer uptake of [[superscript: 18]F]ML-10 in tumours undergoing apoptosis, compared with matched tumour controls imaged in the same animal. Overall, the death-switch model represents a robust and versatile tool for the discovery and validation of apoptosis biomarkers.

History

Citation

Cell Death and Disease, 2013, 4, e613

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Cell Death and Disease

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group: Open Access Journals for Associazione Differenziamento e Morte Cellulare

eissn

2041-4889

Acceptance date

2013-02-25

Copyright date

2013

Available date

2015-07-29

Publisher version

http://www.nature.com/cddis/journal/v4/n5/full/cddis2013137a.html

Language

en