4.7 Article

RB mutation and RAS overexpression induce resistance to NK cell-mediated cytotoxicity in glioma cells

Journal

CANCER CELL INTERNATIONAL
Volume 15, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12935-015-0209-x

Keywords

Glioblastoma; Tumorigenesis; Rb; Ras; Immune evasion; Natural Killer cells

Categories

Funding

  1. Xunta de Galicia [PXIB208091PR]
  2. Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion [SAF2008-00543, SAF2009-08629]
  3. Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnologia, Mexico (CONACYT) [CB158340]
  4. CONACYT [CB180851]
  5. FOSSIS [182362]

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Several theories aim to explain the malignant transformation of cells, including the mutation of tumor suppressors and proto-oncogenes. Deletion of Rb (a tumor suppressor), overexpression of mutated Ras (a proto-oncogene), or both, are sufficient for in vitro gliomagenesis, and these genetic traits are associated with their proliferative capacity. An emerging hallmark of cancer is the ability of tumor cells to evade the immune system. Whether specific mutations are related with this, remains to be analyzed. To address this issue, three transformed glioma cell lines were obtained (Rb-/-, Ras(V12), and Rb-/-/Ras(V12)) by in vitro retroviral transformation of astrocytes, as previously reported. In addition, Ras(V12) and Rb-/-/Ras(V12) transformed cells were injected into SCID mice and after tumor growth two stable glioma cell lines were derived. All these cells were characterized in terms of Rb and Ras gene expression, morphology, proliferative capacity, expression of MHC I, Rae1 delta, and Rae1 alpha beta gamma delta epsilon, mult1, H60a, H60b, H60c, as ligands for NK cell receptors, and their susceptibility to NK cell-mediated cytotoxicity. Our results show that transformation of astrocytes (Rb loss, Ras overexpression, or both) induced phenotypical and functional changes associated with resistance to NK cell-mediated cytotoxicity. Moreover, the transfer of cell lines of transformed astrocytes into SCID mice increased resistance to NK cell-mediated cytotoxicity, thus suggesting that specific changes in a tumor suppressor (Rb) and a proto-oncogene (Ras) are enough to confer resistance to NK cell-mediated cytotoxicity in glioma cells and therefore provide some insight into the ability of tumor cells to evade immune responses.

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