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Research Paper
mda-7 (IL-24) Inhibits Growth and Enhances Radiosensitivity of Glioma Cells In Vitro via JNK Signaling
Adly Yacoub, Clint Mitchell, Irina V. Lebedeva, Devanand Sarkar, Zao-Zhong Su, Robert McKinstry, Rahul V. Gopalkrishnan, Steven Grant, Paul B. Fisher and Paul Dent
volume 2 | issue 4
july/august 2003Pages: 347-353
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Despite therapeutic interventions including surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy, glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) has a very poor prognosis and novel therapies are required. MDA-7 (IL-24), when expressed via a recombinant replication defective adenovirus, Ad.mda-7, has profound anti-proliferative and cytotoxic effects in a variety of tumor cells, but not in non-transformed cells. The present studies examined the combined impact of Ad.mda-7 and ionizing radiation on the proliferation and survival of GBM cells. Ad.mda-7 reduced the proliferation of rodent and human glioma cells in MTT assays and in colony formation assays. The anti-proliferative effects of Admda-7 were enhanced by radiation in a greater than additive fashion. In vitro, this cellular change correlated with enhanced cell numbers in G1/G0 and G2/M phases of the cell cycle, implying Ad.mda-7 radiosensitizes tumor cells in a cell cycle-independent manner. The radiosensitizing effects were not observed in cultures of non-transformed primary astrocytes. The enhanced reduction in growth correlated with increased necrosis and DNA degradation. Ad.mda-7 enhanced p38 and ERK1/2 activity but did not alter JNK or Akt activity. Irradiation of cells expressing MDA-7 suppressed ERK1/2 activity and dramatically enhanced JNK1/2 activity without altering either Akt or p38 activity. Inhibition of JNK1/2, but not p38, signaling abolished the radiosensitizing properties of MDA-7. Inhibition of neither ERK1/2 nor PI3K signaling enhanced the anti-proliferative effects of Ad.mda-7, whereas combined inhibition of both pathways enhanced cell killing, suggesting that ERK and PI3K signaling can be protective against MDA-7 lethality.
We now provide open access to journal articles published online for one year or more. This article may be downloaded at the following link:
If the document does not open, please right-click on the link (control-click on a Macintosh) and select the option to save the file to disk.




