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Springer Nature [academic journals on nature.com], Cell Death & Differentiation, 3(17), p. 551-561, 2009

DOI: 10.1038/cdd.2009.141

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Radiation and anticancer drugs can facilitate mitochondrial bypass by CD95/Fas via c-FLIP downregulation

Journal article published in 2009 by I. Verbrugge, C. Maas, M. Heijkoop, M. Verheij, J. Borst ORCID
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

In many tumor cell types, ionizing radiation or DNA-damaging anticancer drugs enhance sensitivity to death receptor-mediated apoptosis, which is of clinical interest. APO010, a form of CD95/Fas ligand is currently in a phase I trial in patients with solid tumors. To analyze the potential of combined modality treatment with APO010, we used p53-mutant Jurkat T leukemic cells, in which the mitochondrial pathway was blocked by Bcl-2 overexpression. These cells were strongly sensitized to APO010 by pretreatment with ionizing - or UV radiation, etoposide, histone deacetylase - or proteasome inhibitors. These stimuli alone did not induce apoptosis in J16-Bcl-2 cells. Sensitization could not be explained by the overruling of mitochondrial resistance imposed by Bcl-2, upregulation of CD95 membrane levels or modulation of inhibitor of apoptosis proteins. Rather, the stimuli commonly downregulated c-FLIP(L/S) protein levels, which was causally related to the sensitization: deliberate c-FLIP(L/S) downregulation by RNA interference largely overruled the capacity of the various stimuli to sensitize Jurkat-Bcl-2 cells to apoptotic execution by APO010. In p53-mutant, Bcl-2 overexpressing HCT-15 colon carcinoma cells, c-FLIP downregulation correlated with sensitization to APO010 for some, but not all stimuli. We conclude that c-FLIP downregulation represents a mechanism by which diverse anticancer regimens can facilitate tumor cell execution by CD95/Fas through the direct pathway of caspase activation.