Title of article :
Sunitinib Combined with Th1 Cytokines Potentiates Apoptosis in Human Breast Cancer Cells and Suppresses Tumor Growth in a Murine Model of HER-2pos Breast Cancer
Author/Authors :
Ghimirey, Nirmala Department of Biological Sciences - Kent State University - Kent - Ohio 44242, USA , Steele, Chase Department of Biological Sciences - Kent State University - Kent - Ohio 44242, USA , Czerniecki, Brian J. Department of Breast Oncology - H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center - Tampa Florida 33612, USA , Koski, Gary K. Department of Biological Sciences - Kent State University - Kent - Ohio 44242, USA , Showalter, Loral E. Department of Biological Sciences - Kent State University - Kent - Ohio 44242, USA
Abstract :
Although immune-based therapies have made remarkable inroads in cancer treatment, they usually must be combined with
standard treatment modalities, including cytotoxic drugs, to achieve maximal clinical benefits. As immunotherapies are further
advanced and refined, considerable efforts will be required to identify combination therapies that will maximize clinical
responses while simultaneously decreasing the unpleasant and sometimes life-threatening side effects of standard therapy. Over
the last two decades, evidence has emerged that Th1 cytokines can play a central role in protective antitumor immunity and that
combinations of Th1 cytokines can induce senescence and apoptosis in cancer cells. To explore the possibility of combining
targeted drugs with Th1-polarizing vaccines, we undertook a study to examine the impact of combining Th1 cytokines with the
relatively broad-spectrum receptor tyrosine kinase antagonist, sunitinib. We found that when a panel of five phenotypically
diverse human breast cancer cell lines was subjected to treatment with sunitinib plus recombinant Th1 cytokines IFN-γ and
TNF-α, synergistic effects were observed across a number of parameters including different aspects of apoptotic cell death.
Interestingly, sunitinib was found to have a profoundly suppressive effect of T cell’s capacity to secrete IFN-γ, indicating that
in vivo use of this drug may hinder robust Th1 responses. Nonetheless, this suppression was circumvented in a mouse model of
HER-2pos breast disease by supplying recombinant interferon-gamma to achieve a combination therapy significantly more potent than either agent.
Keywords :
Sunitinib Combined , Th1 Cytokines Potentiates Apoptosis , Human Breast Cancer Cells , Suppresses Tumor Growth , Murine Model , HER-2pos Breast Cancer
Journal title :
International Journal of Breast Cancer