4.3 Article

L1 increases adhesion-mediated proliferation and chemoresistance of retinoblastoma

Journal

ONCOTARGET
Volume 8, Issue 9, Pages 15441-15452

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.14487

Keywords

retinoblastoma; L1; cell adhesion molecules; adhesion-mediated proliferation; chemoresistance

Funding

  1. Korea Research Institute of Bioscience and Biotechnology
  2. National Research Foundation of Korea - Ministry of Science, Information & Communication Technology and Future Planning [NRF-2015R1A2A2A01007743, NRF-2013M3A9B6046566]
  3. Bio & Medical Technology Development Program of the National Research Foundation - Korean government, MSIP [NRF-2015M3A9E6028949]
  4. Global Core Research Center (GCRC) grant from NRF/MEST [2012-0001187]
  5. Pioneer Research Program of NRF/MEST [2012-0009544]
  6. Seoul National University Hospital Research Grant [04-2016-0210]

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Retinoblastoma is the most common intraocular cancer in children, affecting 1/20,000 live births. Currently, children with retinoblastoma were treated with chemotherapy using drugs such as carboplatin, vincristine, and etoposide. Unfortunately, if conventional treatment fails, the affected eyes should be removed to prevent extension into adjacent tissues and metastasis. This study is to investigate the roles of L1 in adhesion-mediated proliferation and chemoresistance of retinoblastoma. L1 was differentially expressed in 30 retinoblastoma tissues and 2 retinoblastoma cell lines. Furthermore, the proportions of L1-positive cells in retinoblastoma tumors were negatively linked with the number of Flexner-Wintersteiner rosettes, a characteristic of differentiated retinoblastoma tumors, in each tumor sample. Following in vitro experiments using L1-deleted and -overexpressing cells showed that L1 increased adhesion-mediated proliferation of retinoblastoma cells via regulation of cell cycle-associated proteins with modulation of Akt, extracellular signal-regulated kinase, and p38 pathways. In addition, L1 increased resistance against carboplatin, vincristine, and esoposide through up-regulation of apoptosis-and multidrug resistance-related genes. In vivo tumor formation and chemoresistance were also positively linked with the levels of L1 in an orthotopic transplantation model in mice. In this manner, L1 increases adhesion-mediated proliferation and chemoresistance of retinoblastoma. Targeted therapy to L1 might be effective in the treatment of retinoblastoma tumors, especially which rapidly proliferate and demonstrate resistance to conventional chemotherapeutic drugs.

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