Samishina Elena A, Blinova Ekaterina V, Roshchin Dmitry A, Suslova Irina R, Blinov Dmitry S, Zhdanov Pavel N, Deryabina Olga N, Kit'ko Olesia V
Department of General Pathology, Laboratory of Pharmacology, All-Union Scientific Center for Biological Active Compounds Safety, Staraja Kupavna, Russia.
Department of Clinical Anatomy, Sechenov University, Moscow, Russia.
J Carcinog. 2019 Jun 13;18:3. doi: 10.4103/jcar.JCar_3_19. eCollection 2019.
Exploration of the biological property of programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) signaling that may impact bladder tumor growth in humanized animals and cell culture.
The aim of this study is to evaluate how PD-L1 signaling involves bladder cancer growth and progression.
This study design involves experimental and study.
A role of PD-L1 signaling pathway inhibition for bladder cancer growth was assessed in humanized immunodeficient animals carried main molecular subtypes of bladder carcinoma patient-derived xenografts and provided with selective anti-PD-L1 treatment; bladder cancer cells invasiveness was evaluated in mixed RT112/84 cells + CD4 cells culture incubated with PD-L1 blocker durvalumab. We used two-tailed Student's -test to explore differences between main and control subgroups. Significance of intergroup comparison was measured with one-way ANOVA followed by the Tukey's or Newman-Keul's criterion. Survival curves were analyzed with Gehan's criterion with the Yate's correction. Differences were considered statistically significant at < 0.05.
Anti-PD-L1 intervention increased survival of the animals carried both primary and relapsed luminal noninvasive, muscular invasive, and relapsed luminal bladder cancer xenografts. There was significant retardation of tumor volume duplication time in aforementioned subgroups correlated with PD-L1 expression. Durvalumab treatment in concentration-dependent manner inhibited tumor cells invasiveness of mixed RT112 + CD4 culture cells with its maximum at the highest studied concentration (10 μM).
Obtained data constituted the pivotal role of programmed cell death-1/PD-L1 signaling pathway in bladder cancer development and progression. The results will have major implications for further clinical investigations.
探索程序性死亡配体1(PD-L1)信号通路的生物学特性,该特性可能会影响人源化动物和细胞培养中的膀胱肿瘤生长。
本研究旨在评估PD-L1信号通路如何参与膀胱癌的生长和进展。
本研究设计包括实验性研究。
在携带膀胱癌患者来源异种移植主要分子亚型的人源化免疫缺陷动物中评估PD-L1信号通路抑制对膀胱癌生长的作用,并给予选择性抗PD-L1治疗;在与PD-L1阻断剂度伐利尤单抗孵育的混合RT112/84细胞+CD4细胞培养物中评估膀胱癌细胞的侵袭性。我们使用双尾学生t检验来探索主要亚组和对照亚组之间的差异。组间比较的显著性通过单因素方差分析,然后采用Tukey或Newman-Keul标准进行测量。生存曲线采用带有Yate校正的Gehan标准进行分析。差异在P<0.05时被认为具有统计学意义。
抗PD-L1干预提高了携带原发性和复发性腔内非侵袭性、肌层浸润性和复发性腔内膀胱癌异种移植的动物的存活率。上述与PD-L1表达相关的亚组中肿瘤体积倍增时间显著延迟。度伐利尤单抗以浓度依赖性方式抑制混合RT112+CD4培养细胞的肿瘤细胞侵袭性,在最高研究浓度(10μM)时达到最大值。
获得的数据表明程序性细胞死亡-1/PD-L1信号通路在膀胱癌发生和进展中起关键作用。这些结果将对进一步的临床研究产生重大影响。