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Received for publication May 14, 2008.
Revised June 27, 2008.
Accepted for publication June 27, 2008.
Exogenous 20-HETE increases the growth of human glioma cells in vitro. However, glioma cells in culture show negligible 20-HETE synthesis. We examined whether inducing the expression of a 20-HETE synthase in a human glioma U251 cell line would increase proliferation. U251 cells transfected with CYP4A1 cDNA (termed U251 O) increased the formation of 20-HETE from less than 1 to over 60 pmol/min/mg proteins and increased their proliferation rate by two fold (p < 0.01). Compared to control U251, U251 O cells were rounded, smaller, showed a disorganized cytoskeleton, exhibited reduced vinculin staining, and were easily detached from the growing surface. They showed a marked increase in dihydroethidium staining suggesting increased oxidative stress. The expression of phosphorylated ERK1/2, cyclin D1/2 and VEGF was markedly elevated in U251 O. The hyperproliferative and signaling effects seen in U251 O cells are abolished by selective CYP4A inhibition of 20-HETE formation with HET0016 (N-hydroxy-N'-(4-butyl-2-methylphenyl)-formamidine) as well as by siRNA against the enzyme, and by the putative 20-HETE antagonist, 20-hydroxyeicosa-6(Z),15(Z)-dienoic acid (20-HEDE). In vivo, implantation of U251O cells in the brain of nude rats resulted in a ~10 fold larger tumor volume (10 days post implantation) as compared with animals receiving mock-transfected U251 cells. These data show that elevations in 20-HETE synthesis in U251 cells lead to an increased growth both in vitro and in vivo. This suggests that 20-HETE may have proto-oncogenic properties in U251 human gliomas and contributes to the regulation of the growth of some human gliomas.
Key words:
20-HETE synthase, Glioma, arachidonic acid metabolite, cytochrome P450 4A, growth, superoxide