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Cancer Therapy: Clinical |
Authors' Affiliations: 1 Department of Pediatrics, Division of Immunology, Haematology, Oncology, Bone Marrow Transplantation and Autoimmune Diseases; Departments of 2 Pathology and 3 Immunohematology and Blood Transfusion, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, the Netherlands; and 4 Department of Pathology, University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, the Netherlands
Requests for reprints: Arjan C. Lankester, Department of Pediatrics, Leiden University Medical Center, P.O. Box 9600, 2300 RC Leiden, the Netherlands. Phone: 31-71-5264131; Fax: 31-71-5248198; E-mail: A.Lankester{at}lumc.nl.
Purpose: Ewing sarcoma is a common pediatric bone tumor with an unfavorable prognosis for metastatic or recurrent disease. Cellular immunotherapy may provide new treatment options and depends on the cytolytic death receptor and perforin/granzyme pathways. Expression of death receptor pathway inhibitor cellular FLICE inhibitory protein (cFLIP), initiator caspase-8, and granzyme B inhibitor protease inhibitor-9 (PI-9) have been reported to determine susceptibility to cell- and chemotherapy-mediated killing in several tumor types. Here, we have studied their in vitro and in vivo expression in Ewing sarcoma and the implications for susceptibility to cytotoxicity.
Experimental Design: Ewing sarcoma cell lines (n = 8) were tested for cFLIP, PI-9, and caspase-8 expression. Functional significance was tested by anti-Fas antibody (death receptor pathway) or natural killer cell (perforin/granzyme pathway) treatment. Immunohistochemistry was done on 28 sections from 18 patients. In half of the cases, sequential material, including metastases, was available.
Results: Although all tested Ewing sarcoma cell lines expressed cFLIP, resistance to CD95/Fasmediated apoptosis was only observed in two cell lines lacking caspase-8 expression. PI-9 was expressed at low levels in four of eight Ewing sarcoma cell lines, but positive cell lines remained susceptible to perforin/granzymemediated killing. In primary Ewing sarcoma, including metastases, cFLIP was abundantly expressed in 18 of 18 patients. Caspase-8 was expressed in all patients but showed more intertumoral and intratumoral variation in both intensity and heterogeneity of staining. PI-9, in contrast, was undetectable.
Conclusions: The expression patterns of cFLIP, caspase-8, and the absence of PI-9 provide a rationale to preferentially exploit the perforin/granzyme pathway in cytotoxic therapies against Ewing sarcoma.
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