Secretory leukocyte protease inhibitor (SLPI) is a serine protease inhibitor that was related to cancer development and metastasis dissemination on several types of tumors. However, it is not known the effect of SLPI on mammary and colon tumors. The aim of this study was to examine the effect of SLPI on mammary and colon tumor growth. The effect of SLPI was tested on in vitro cell apoptosis and in vivo tumor growth experiments. SLPI over-expressing human and murine mammary and colon tumor cells were generated by gene transfection. The administration of murine mammary tumor cells over-expressing high levels of SLPI did not develop tumors in mice. On the contrary, the administration of murine colon tumor cells over-expressing SLPI, developed faster tumors than control cells. Intratumoral, but not intraperitoneal administration of SLPI, delayed the growth of tumors and increased the survival of mammary but not colon tumor bearing mice. In vitro culture of mammary tumor cell lines treated with SLPI, and SLPI producer clones were more prone to apoptosis than control cells, mainly under serum deprivation culture conditions. Herein we demonstrated that SLPI induces the apoptosis of mammary tumor cells in vitro and decreases the mammary but not colon tumor growth in vivo. Therefore, SLPI may be a new potential therapeutic tool for certain tumors, such as mammary tumors.
Glucocorticoids (GCs) are steroid hormones widely used as coadjuvants in the treatment of solid tumors due to their anti-inflammatory effects. However, evidence show that they also may induce chemotherapy resistance, probably through their capacity to inhibit apoptosis triggered by antineoplastic drugs. GCs exert their action by regulating gene expression throughout two main mechanisms: transactivation, where the activated glucocorticoid receptor (GR) directly binds to certain genes; and transrepression, an indirect mechanism by which GR regulates other transcription factors activities. Recently, our group has shown that the rigid steroid 21-hydroxy-6,19-epoxyprogesterone (21OH-6,19OP) is a selective GR ligand that behaves as an agonist in transrepression assays and as an antagonist in transactivation ones. Here, we have evaluated the anti-inflammatory activity of 21OH-6,19OP, its capacity to generate chemoresistance, as well as its mechanism of action. We found that 21OH-6,19OP inhibits nitrites formation and the inducible nitric oxide synthase (Nos-2) expression in macrophages. It also blocks the expression of both cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) and interleukin-8 (IL-8) triggered by tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α) in epithelial lung cancer cells. However, contrary to dexamethasone (DEX), 19OP neither reverts the paclitaxel-induced caspase-3 activity, nor induces the anti-apoptotic Bcl-X L gene expression in murine tumor mammary epithelial cells; and importantly, it lacks GCs-associated chemoresistance in a mouse mammary tumor model. Together, our findings suggest that 21OH-6,19OP behaves as a dissociated GC that keeps anti-inflammatory action without affecting the apoptotic process triggered by chemotherapeutic drugs. For these reasons, this steroid may become a putative novel coadjuvant in the treatment of breast cancer.
Activity of the human long interspersed nuclear elements‐1 (LINE‐1) retrotransposon occurs mainly in early embryonic development and during hippocampal neurogenesis. SOX‐11, a transcription factor relevant to neuronal development, has unknown functions in the control of LINE‐1 retrotransposon activity during neuronal differentiation. To study the dependence of LINE‐1 activity on SOX‐11 during neuronal differentiation, we induced differentiation of human SH‐SY5Y neuroblastoma cells and adult adipose mesenchymal stem cells (hASCs) to a neuronal fate and found increased LINE‐1 activity. We also show that SOX‐11 protein binding to the LINE‐1 promoter is higher in differentiating neuroblastoma cells, while knock‐down of SOX‐11 inhibits the induction of LINE‐1 transcription in differentiating conditions. These results suggest that activation of LINE‐1 retrotransposition during neuronal differentiation is mediated by SOX‐11.
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