Interleukin-12 Enhances the Sensitivity of Human Osteosarcoma Cells to 4-Hydroperoxycyclophosphamide by a Mechanism Involving the Fas/Fas-Ligand Pathway

Xiaoping Duan, Zhichao Zhou, Shu Fang Jia, Michael Colvin, Elizabeth A. Lafleur, Eugenie S. Kleinerman

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

17 Scopus citations

Abstract

Cyclophosphamide (CY) and its derivative ifosfamide are alkylating agents used to treat osteosarcoma (OS). The purpose of these studies was to determine whether alkylating agents affect the expression of Fas ligand (FasL) and whether interleukin 12 enhances the sensitivity of human OS cells to alkylating agents. 4-Hydroperoxycyclophosphamide (4-HC), the preactivated CY compound, and 4-hydroperoxydidechlorocloclophosphamide (4-HDC), its nonalkylating analogue, human OS LM6 cells, and a clone of cells derived by transfection with the interleukin 12 gene (LM6-#6) were used for these studies. Incubation of LM6 and LM6-#6 with 10 pμM 4-HC increased the expression of FasL mRNA (2.5- and 3.0-fold, respectively). By contrast, 4-HDC, Adriamycin (ADR), cisplatin (CDP), and methotrexate (MTX) had no effect on FasL mRNA expression. Increased FasL expression after treatment with 4-HC was also demonstrated by immunohistochemistry and flow cytometry. Drug-induced FasL was functional and mediated cell death. We examined the effect of FasL up-regulation by 4-HC on LM6 and LM6-#6 cells. Flow cytometry showed that LM6-#6 cells expressed 2. 2-fold more Fas than LM6 cells. Cytotoxicity of 4-HC, 4-HDC, ADR, CDP, and MTX on LM6, LM6-neo, and LM6-#6 were quantified. Colony-forming assay revealed an IC50 of 2.10 μM for 4-HC in LM6-neo cells compared with 0.41 μM in LM6-#6 cells. The IC50 for 4-HDC, ADR, CDP, and MTX were not significantly different between the two cell lines. We concluded that the increased expression of Fas enhanced LM6-#6 sensitivity to 4-HC. These data indicate that Fas/FasL may be involved in the cytotoxic pathway of CY. Combining biological agents with chemotherapeutic agents that have complementary Fas/FasL pathway actions may offer new therapeutic alternatives.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)777-783
Number of pages7
JournalClinical Cancer Research
Volume10
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 15 2004

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Oncology
  • Cancer Research

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