6533b7d1fe1ef96bd125cef4
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Cardiac Glycosides Exert Anticancer Effects by Inducing Immunogenic Cell Death
Laurie MengerLorenzo GalluzziLorenzo GalluzziXavier GidrolMickaël MichaudMickaël MichaudMickaël MichaudErika VacchelliErika VacchelliErika VacchelliGrégoire MignotYuting MaYuting MaYuting MaEric SulpiceFrançois GhiringhelliNazanine ModjtahediNazanine ModjtahediNazanine ModjtahediFabrice AndreFabrice AndreFrédéric SchlemmerFrédéric SchlemmerFrédéric SchlemmerClara LocherClara LocherClara LocherGuido KroemerTakahiro YamazakiTakahiro YamazakiTakahiro YamazakiOliver KeppOliver KeppOliver KeppIsabelle MartinsIsabelle MartinsIsabelle MartinsSandy AdjemianSandy AdjemianSandy AdjemianLaurence ZitvogelLaurence ZitvogelLaurence ZitvogelShensi ShenShensi ShenShensi ShenAbdul Qader SukkurwalaAbdul Qader SukkurwalaAbdul Qader Sukkurwalasubject
Programmed cell deathDigoxinOrganoplatinum Compoundsmedicine.medical_treatment[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Antineoplastic AgentsBiosensing TechniquesBiologyPharmacologyCardiac Glycosides03 medical and health sciencesMice0302 clinical medicineImmune systemCell Line TumorNeoplasmsmedicineAnimalsHumansAnthracyclinesComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesChemotherapyGeneral Medicinemedicine.disease3. Good healthOxaliplatinOxaliplatinCell culture030220 oncology & carcinogenesisHepatocellular carcinomaCancer cellImmunogenic cell deathmedicine.drugdescription
Some successful chemotherapeutics, notably anthracyclines and oxaliplatin, induce a type of cell stress and death that is immunogenic, hence converting the patient's dying cancer cells into a vaccine that stimulates antitumor immune responses. By means of a fluorescence microscopy platform that allows for the automated detection of the biochemical hallmarks of such a peculiar cell death modality, we identified cardiac glycosides (CGs) as exceptionally efficient inducers of immunogenic cell death, an effect that was associated with the in- hibition of the plasma membrane Na + - and K + -dependent adenosine triphosphatase (Na + /K + -ATPase). CGs ex- acerbated the antineoplastic effects of DNA-damaging agents in immunocompetent but not immunodeficient mice. Moreover, cancer cells succumbing to a combination of chemotherapy plus CGs could vaccinate synge- neic mice against a subsequent challenge with living cells of the same type. Finally, retrospective clinical analy- ses revealed that the administration of the CG digoxin during chemotherapy had a positive impact on overall survival in cohorts of breast, colorectal, head and neck, and hepatocellular carcinoma patients, especially when they were treated with agents other than anthracyclines and oxaliplatin.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2012-07-18 |