1.Fatty Acid Composition of Tissue Cultured Breast Carcinoma and the Effect of Stearoyl-CoA Desaturase 1 Inhibition.
Fatemeh MOHAMMADZADEH ; Gholamali MOSAYEBI ; Vahid MONTAZERI ; Maryam DARABI ; Shabnam FAYEZI ; Maghsod SHAAKER ; Mohammad RAHMATI ; Behzad BARADARAN ; Amir MEHDIZADEH ; Masoud DARABI
Journal of Breast Cancer 2014;17(2):136-142
PURPOSE: Stearoyl-CoA desaturase 1 (SCD1) is a novel therapeutic target in various malignancies, including breast cancer. The present study was designed to investigate the effect of the pharmacologic inhibition of SCD1 on fatty acid composition in tissue explant cultures of human breast cancer and to compare these effects with those in adjacent nonneoplastic breast tissue. METHODS: Paired samples of tumor and adjacent noncancerous tissue were isolated from 12 patients with infiltrating ductal breast cancer. Samples were explant cultured in vitro, exposed to the highly selective SCD1 inhibitor CAY10566, and examined for fatty acid composition by gas liquid chromatography. The cytotoxic and antigrowth effects were evaluated by quantification of lactate dehydrogenase release and by sulforhodamine B (SRB) measurement, respectively. RESULTS: Breast cancer tissue samples were found to have higher levels of monounsaturated fatty acids (MUFA) (p<0.001) and arachidonic acid (20:4n-6, p<0.001) and a lower level of linoleic acid (18:2n-6, p=0.02) than the normal-appearing breast tissues. While exhibiting no evident cytotoxicity, treatment with the SCD1 inhibitor, CAY10566 (0.1-1 microM), for 48 hours significantly increased 18:2n-6 levels in both the tumor and adjacent normal-appearing tissue (approximately 1.2 fold, p<0.05). However, the breast cancer tissue samples showed significant increases in the levels of MUFA and 20:4n-6 compared to the normal-appearing breast tissues (p<0.05). The SRB growth assay revealed a higher rate of inhibition with the SCD1 inhibitor in breast cancer tissues than in normal-appearing tissues (p<0.01, 41% vs. 29%). The SCD1 inhibitor also elevated saturated fatty acid (1.46-fold, p=0.001) levels only in the tumor tissue explant. CONCLUSION: The fatty acid composition and response to SCD1 inhibition differed between the explant cultures from breast cancer and the adjacent normal-appearing tissue. Altered fatty acid composition induced by SCD1 inhibition may also, in addition to Delta9 desaturation, modulate other reactions in de novo fatty acid synthesis and lipogenesis, and subsequently affect the overall survival and progression of breast cancer.
Arachidonic Acid
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Breast
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Breast Neoplasms*
;
Chromatography, Liquid
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Fatty Acid Desaturases
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Fatty Acids, Monounsaturated
;
Humans
;
L-Lactate Dehydrogenase
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Linoleic Acid
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Lipogenesis
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Stearoyl-CoA Desaturase*
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Tissue Culture Techniques
2.Evaluation of Antibody Response to Polysaccharide Vaccine and Switched Memory B Cells in Pediatric Patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease.
Gholamhossein FALLAHI ; Asghar AGHAMOHAMMADI ; Ahmad KHODADAD ; Mojtaba HASHEMI ; Payam MOHAMMADINEJAD ; Hossein ASGARIAN-OMRAN ; Mehri NAJAFI ; Fatemeh FARHMAND ; Farzaneh MOTAMED ; Khadije SOLEIMANI ; Habib SOHEILI ; Nima PARVANEH ; Behzad DARABI ; Rasoul NASIRI KALMARZI ; Shabnam POURHAMDI ; Hassan ABOLHASSANI ; Babak MIRMINACHI ; Nima REZAEI
Gut and Liver 2014;8(1):24-28
BACKGROUND/AIMS: Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a chronic disease of the gastrointestinal tract, whose etiologies are still unknown. This study was performed to evaluate the humoral immune response in terms of B cell functions in selected IBD patients. METHODS: Eighteen pediatric patients with IBD, including 12 cases of ulcerative colitis (UC) and six with Crohn disease (CD), were enrolled in this study. The pneumococcal vaccine was injected in all patients, and the IgG antibody level to the polysaccharide antigen was measured before and 4 weeks after injection. The B cell switch-recombination process was evaluated. RESULTS: Five patients with IBD (three CD and two UC) had defects in B cell switching, which was significantly higher than in controls (p=0.05). Ten patients had a specific antibody deficiency and exhibited a higher frequency of bacterial infection than the healthy group. The mean increased level of IgG after vaccination was lower in IBD patients (82.9+/-32.5 microg/mL vs 219.8+/-59.0 microg/mL; p=0.001). Among the patients who had an insufficient response, no significant difference in the number of switched memory B-cell was observed. CONCLUSIONS: A defect in B lymphocyte switching was observed in pediatric IBD patients, and especially in those patients with CD. Owing to an increased risk of bacterial infections in those patients with antibody production defects, pneumococcal vaccination could be recommended. However, not all patients can benefit from the vaccination, and several may require other prophylactic methods.
Adolescent
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Antibody Formation/*drug effects
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B-Lymphocytes/metabolism
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Child
;
Child, Preschool
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Colitis, Ulcerative/complications/*immunology
;
Crohn Disease/complications/*immunology
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Immunoglobulin G/metabolism
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Inflammatory Bowel Diseases/complications/*immunology
;
Male
;
Pneumococcal Vaccines/*pharmacology
;
Polysaccharides/*pharmacology
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Treatment Outcome