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Author(s): |
Franciele Hinterholz Knebel
Total Authors: 1
|
Document type: | Master's Dissertation |
Press: | São Paulo. |
Institution: | Universidade de São Paulo (USP). Conjunto das Químicas (IQ e FCF) (CQ/DBDCQ) |
Defense date: | 2010-03-05 |
Examining board members: |
Ana Campa;
Alison Colquhoun;
Ana Paula Lepique
|
Advisor: | Ana Campa |
Abstract | |
In spite of the evidences sustaining the participation of SAA in processes that favor carcinogenesis and metastasis, and the proposal of SAA as a marker of tumor progression, no studies have yet addressed a potential direct activity of SAA on tumor cells. This study examined the direct effect of SAA on two human glioma lineages. Gliomas are primary brain tumors more common in adults and the lineages of this study, A172 and T98G, represent human carcinomas characterized by a highly aggressive biological behaviour and almost always fatal, classified as grade IV. A172 and T98G have some important differences in the invasiveness, they are less invasive and more invasive, respectively. For this study, we evaluated the effect of SAA on the synthesis of compounds representing different classes of substances that are somehow involved in tumor progression, among them we can cite the cytokine IL-8, the messenger molecule NO, the metalloproteinases MMP2 and MMP9 and RECK gene. Furthermore, we wonder if SAA was involved in the processes of proliferation, migration and cell invasion. SAA stimulated the production of IL-8 in lineage A172, while T98G produced high amounts of IL-8 that were not modified by SAA addition. SAA did not stimulate the production of IL-6 and TNF-α. SAA induced the production of NO, increased the expression of MMP-2 and MPP-9 and decreased the regulator of the expression of the MMPs; gene RECK. Moreover, we observed that SAA was a mitogenic stimulus, but it had a dual effect on migration and invasiveness behavior depending on cell lineage. For T98G SAA increased migration and invasion, and for A172 SAA inhibited migration and invasion. SAA was constitutively expressed and produced by both strains, and the isoform SAA1 predominated. The gene expression of all isoforms, SAA1, SAA2, SAA4, and protein synthesis of SAA were increased by the addition of INF-γ. Our findings based on in vitro assays support a direct contribution of SAA to tumor development, progression and metastasis depending on the cell type and concentration of SAA. Besides the role of SAA on tumor growth during an acute phase, the fact that SAA was expressed in tumor cells suggests an intracrine or an autocrine action of SAA. (AU) |