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Clinical Cancer Research Vol. 10, 2100-2108, March 2004
© 2004 American Association for Cancer Research


Experimental Therapeutics, Preclinical Pharmacology

Antisense Oligonucleotide Targeting of Raf-1

Importance of Raf-1 mRNA Expression Levels and Raf-1-Dependent Signaling in Determining Growth Response in Ovarian Cancer

Peter Mullen1, Fiona McPhillips1, Kenneth MacLeod1, Brett Monia2, John F. Smyth1 and Simon P. Langdon1

1 Cancer Research UK, Edinburgh Oncology Unit, Western General Hospital, Edinburgh, United Kingdom, and 2 Isis Pharmaceuticals Inc., Carlsbad, California

Purpose: We sought to identify determinants of growth response to the Raf-1-targeted antisense oligonucleotide (ASO; ISIS 5132) using a large panel of ovarian cancer cell lines.

Experimental Design: First-(ISIS 5132) and second-generation (ISIS 13650) anti-Raf 1 ASOs were compared with control oligonucleotides. Growth was assessed by cell counts; apoptosis was assessed by poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase cleavage; and cell cycle analysis was assessed by flow cytometry. Protein expression was detected by Western blot analysis, and mRNA expression was detected by quantitative reverse transcription-PCR. Raf-1 kinase activity was detected by anti-Raf-1 immunoprecipitation, followed by myelin basic protein phosphorylation.

Results: A panel of 15 ovarian cancer cell lines was used to model a range of growth responses to ASOs targeting Raf-1 mRNA. Growth inhibition varied from 10% to >90% inhibition. Growth inhibition was associated with increased apoptosis and accumulation of cells in the G2-M and S phases of the cell cycle. Growth response was not related to level of Raf-1 protein expression, Raf-1 kinase activity, intracellular ASO uptake, or degree of Raf-1 protein inhibition. However, ASO growth response was associated with a high proportion of Raf-1 mRNA [relative to total (i.e., Raf-1 + A-Raf + B-Raf) Raf mRNA] and significantly higher Raf-1 kinase activity induction following growth factor (transforming growth factor {alpha}) stimulation in the cell lines consistent with dependency of these cell lines on Raf-1.

Conclusions: These data indicate that ovarian cancers demonstrate differential sensitivity to ASOs targeted against Raf-1, and target expression levels and degree of utilization of Raf-1 signaling are implicated. Clinically sensitive tumors could feasibly be identified.




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Copyright © 2004 by the American Association for Cancer Research.