Detalhes do Documento

Oxidative damage and response to Bacillus Calmette-Guérin in bladder cancer cells expressing sialyltransferase ST3GAL1

Autor(es): Severino, P ; Silva, M ; Carrascal, M ; Malagolini, N ; Chiricolo, M ; Venturi, G ; Barbaro Forleo, R ; Astolfi, A ; Catera, M ; Videira, P ; Dall'Olio, F

Data: 2018

Identificador Persistente: https://hdl.handle.net/10216/126473

Origem: Repositório Aberto da Universidade do Porto


Descrição

Treatment with Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) is the gold standard adjuvant immunotherapy of non-muscle invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC), although it fails in one third of the patients. NMIBC expresses two tumor-associated O-linked carbohydrates: the disaccharide (Galß1,3GalNAc) Thomsen-Friedenreich (T) antigen, and its sialylated counterpart (Siaa2,3Galß1,3GalNAc) sialyl-T (sT), synthesized by sialyltransferase ST3GAL1, whose roles in BCG response are unknown. Methods: The human bladder cancer (BC) cell line HT1376 strongly expressing the T antigen, was retrovirally transduced with the ST3GAL1 cDNA or with an empty vector, yielding the cell lines HT1376sT and HT1376T, that express, respectively, either the sT or the T antigens. Cells were in vitro challenged with BCG. Whole gene expression was studied by microarray technology, cytokine secretion was measured by multiplex immune-beads assay. Human macrophages derived from blood monocytes were challenged with the secretome of BCG-challenged BC cells. Results: The secretome from BCG-challenged HT1376sT cells induced a stronger macrophage secretion of IL-6, IL-1ß, TNFa and IL-10 than that of HT1376T cells. Transcriptomic analysis revealed that ST3GAL1 overexpression and T/sT replacement modulated hundreds of genes. Several genes preserving genomic stability were down-regulated in HT1376sT cells which, as a consequence, displayed increased sensitivity to oxidative damage. After BCG challenge, the transcriptome of HT1376sT cells showed higher susceptibility to BCG modulation than that of HT1376T cells. Conclusions: High ST3GAL1 expression and T/sT replacement in BCG challenged-BC cancer cells induce a stronger macrophage response and alter the gene expression towards genomic instability, indicating a potential impact on BC biology and patient's response to BCG.

Tipo de Documento Artigo científico
Idioma Inglês
facebook logo  linkedin logo  twitter logo 
mendeley logo

Documentos Relacionados

Não existem documentos relacionados.