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TGF Beta-induced Smad Signaling Remains Intact in Primary Human Ovarian Cancer Cells

Overview
Journal Endocrinology
Specialty Endocrinology
Date 2002 Mar 19
PMID 11897669
Citations 13
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Abstract

Disruptions in TGF beta signaling have been implicated in various human cancers, including ovarian cancer. Our goal was to determine whether ovarian cancer cells isolated from patient ascites fluid were growth inhibited by TGF beta 1 treatment and further characterize the expression and activity profile of TGF beta/Smad signaling components in human ovarian cancer cells. We found that 9 of 10 primary cultures of ovarian cancer cells (OC2-10) were growth inhibited by 16 pM TGF beta 1. One primary ovarian cancer sample (OC1) and the established ovarian cancer cell lines CaOV3 and SkOV3 continued to grow in the presence of TGF beta 1. All cells expressed components of the TGF beta/Smad signaling pathway including TGF beta 1, T beta RI, T beta RII, Smad2, -3, -4, and Smad anchor for receptor activation. Although OC1, CaOV3, and SkOV3 are not growth inhibited by TGF beta 1, they can transmit the TGF beta 1 signal to turn on a transfected TGF beta/Smad reporter gene, p3TP.lux. In addition, all cells up-regulate the endogenous TGF beta target genes Smad7 and PAI-1. p15(Ink4B) mRNA is also up-regulated with TGF beta 1 treatment in OC2-9, whereas the p15(Ink4B) gene has been deleted in OC1, CaOV3, and SkOV3 cells. Homozygous deletion of p15(Ink4B) may account for TGF beta resistance in some populations of ovarian cancer cells. Our data demonstrate that the TGF beta/Smad signaling pathway remains functional in human ovarian cancer cells and suggest that if abnormalities exist in the cellular response of TGF beta signals, they must lie downstream of the Smad proteins.

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