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1 Department of Hematology and Oncology, Winship Cancer Institute, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia and 2 Department of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California
Requests for reprints: Shi-Yong Sun, Winship Cancer Institute, Emory University School of Medicine, 1365-C Clifton Road Northeast, C3088, Atlanta, GA 30322. Phone: 404-778-2170; Fax: 404-778-5520; E-mail: shi-yong.sun{at}emoryhealthcare.org.
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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The cellular FLICE-inhibitory protein (c-FLIP) plays a key role in negatively regulating the extrinsic apoptotic pathway through inhibition of caspase-8 activation (5). c-FLIP has multiple splice variants, and two main forms have been well characterized: c-FLIP short form (c-FLIPS) and long form (c-FLIPL; ref. 5). It has been well documented that elevated c-FLIP expression protects cells from death receptormediated apoptosis, whereas down-regulation of c-FLIP by chemicals or small interfering RNA (siRNA) sensitizes cells to death receptormediated apoptosis (5). Moreover, overexpression of c-FLIP also protects cells from apoptosis induced by cancer therapeutic agents such as etoposide and cisplatin (68). In the present study, we show for the first time that celecoxib, in addition to up-regulating death receptor 5, down-regulates c-FLIP expression, which contributes to celecoxib-induced apoptosis in nonsmall-cell lung cancer cells. This further confirms and expands our previous finding that celecoxib induces apoptosis in nonsmall-cell lung cancer cell lines primarily through the activation of the extrinsic death receptor pathway (4).
| Materials and Methods |
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Cell lines and cell culture. The human nonsmall-cell lung cancer cell lines used in this study were purchased from the American Type Culture Collection (Manassas, VA) and cultured as previously described (4). H157-V and H157-AS cell lines, in which retroviral vector and antisense cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) were stably transfected, respectively (10), were kindly provided by Dr. S.M. Dubinett.
Western blot analysis. Preparation of whole-cell protein lysates and the procedures for the Western blotting were previously described (4).
Immunoprecipitation. A549-FLIPL-2 cells, which stably express FLIPL, were transfected with hemagglutinin-ubiquitin plasmid using FuGENE 6 transfection reagent (Roche Diagnostics Corp., Indianapolis, IN) following the manufacturer's instruction. After 24 hours, the cells were treated with celecoxib or MG132 plus celecoxib for 4 hours and then were lysed for immunoprecipitation of Flag-FLIPL with Flag M2 monoclonal antibody (Sigma Chemicals) as previously described (11), followed by the detection of ubiquitinated FLIPL by Western blotting with antihemagglutinin antibody (Abgent, San Diego, CA).
Silencing of COX-2 expression with siRNA. Stealth COX-2 siRNA that targets the sequence 5'-GCAGGCAGATGAAATACCAGTCTTT-3' and Stealth control siRNA (12) were synthesized by Invitrogen (Carlsbad, CA). The transfection of siRNA was conducted as previously described (12).
Generation of lentiviral c-FLIP expression constructs and establishment of stable lines that overexpress c-FLIP. c-FLIPL and c-FLIPS coding regions were amplified by PCR using plasmids containing full-length cDNAs of FLIPL and FLIPS, respectively, which were provided by Dr. J. Tschopp. The amplified fragments were then ligated into the pT-easy vector (Promega, Madison, WI) following the manufacturer's protocol as pT-easy-FLIPL and pT-easy-FLIPS, respectively, using the following primers: FLIPL sense, 5'-GACTAGTGCCGCCACCATGGATTACAAAGACGATGACG-3'; FLIPL antisense, 5'-CGGGCCCTTATGTGTAGGAGAGGATAAGTTTC-3'; FLIPS sense, 5'-GACTAGTGCCGCCACCATGTCTGCTGAAGTCATCCATCAGG-3'; and FLIPS antisense, 5'-CGGGCCCTCACATGGAACAATTTCCAAG-3'. Both pLenti-DcR1 (a lentiviral vector harboring the DcR1 gene, which was constructed using the pLenti6/V5 Directional TOPO Cloning kit purchased from Invitrogen) and pT-easy-FLIPL or pT-easy-FLIPS were cut with SpeI and ApaI restriction enzymes. The released fragment containing c-FLIPL or c-FLIPS gene was then cloned into the digested pLenti6/V5 vector and the resultant constructs were named pLenti-Flag-FLIPL and pLenti-FLIPS, respectively. In this study, we used pLenti-LacZ as a vector control, which was included in the pLenti6/V5 Directional TOPO Cloning kit.
Lentiviral production and titer determination were previously described (12). For infection, the viruses were added to the cells at a multiplicity of infection of 10 with 10 µg/mL polybrene. For transient expression, cells were infected and then subjected to initial selection with 50 µg/mL blasticidin beginning at 24 hours after infection. Five days later, the cells were used for the given experiments. For stable expression, cell clones were picked after a 2-week selection with 50 µg/mL blasticidin postinfection and screened for FLIP expression by Western blotting with c-FLIP antibody. The clones with the highest levels of FLIP expression were used in the experiment.
Detection of apoptosis. Apoptosis was evaluated by Annexin V staining using Annexin V-PE apoptosis detection kit purchased from BD Biosciences (San Jose, CA) following the manufacturer's instructions. We also detected caspase activation by Western blotting (as described above) as an additional indicator of apoptosis.
| Results and Discussion |
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25 µmol/L), suggesting that FLIPS is somewhat more sensitive to modulation by celecoxib than FLIPL. The down-regulation of both FLIPL and FLIPS occurred as early as 3 hours and was sustained up to 48 hours after celecoxib treatment (Fig. 1B). We noted that the reduction of c-FLIP, particularly FLIPL, at the late time points (e.g., 24 and 48 hours) was not as strong as that at the early time points (e.g., 3 and 6 hours). Nevertheless, these results clearly indicate that celecoxib down-regulates c-FLIP expression in human nonsmall-cell lung cancer cells, which represents an early event during celecoxib-induced apoptosis. We next determined whether other nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, including SC58125, NS-398, sulindac sulfide, and Dup697, down-regulated c-FLIP expression. As presented in Fig. 1C, these agents, particularly at 75 µmol/L, decreased the levels of both FLIPL and FLIPS, albeit with weaker activity than celecoxib, which, at 50 µmol/L, effectively reduced c-FLIP levels. Thus, we conclude that other COX-2 inhibitors down-regulate c-FLIP expression as well.
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10 µmol/L abrogated the ability of celecoxib to reduce both FLIPL and FLIPS, suggesting that celecoxib down-regulates c-FLIP through proteasome-mediated protein degradation. We also noted that MG132 alone did not increase the levels of FLIPL but strikingly increased the levels of FLIPS, suggesting that FLIPS is more prone to proteasome-mediated degradation, which is consistent to the recent findings by Poukkula et al. (14). Moreover, we examined the effects of celecoxib on overall proteasome activity and c-FLIP ubiquitination. Celecoxib did not increase proteasome activity (data not shown). However, it increased the levels of ubiquitinated c-FLIP, particularly in the presence of MG132 (Fig. 2B), indicating that celecoxib increases c-FLIP ubiquitination. Collectively, we suggest that celecoxib down-regulates c-FLIP levels through a ubiquitin-proteasome mechanism.
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It is well known that celecoxib is a specific COX-2 inhibitor. However, many studies show that celecoxib induces apoptosis independent of COX-2 inhibitory activity (2). To determine whether celecoxib decreases c-FLIP levels through its COX-2 inhibitory activity, we compared the modulatory effects of celecoxib on c-FLIP between H157 cells stably transfected with a retroviral vector harboring antisense COX-2 (H157-AS) and vector control cells (H157-V). As shown in Fig. 2C, the basal levels of COX-2 in H157 cell were reduced compared with H157-V cells. Interestingly, we found that celecoxib, albeit a COX-2 inhibitor, actually increased COX-2 protein levels in a concentration-dependent manner in H157-V cells; this effect was abolished in H157-AS cells. Together, these results validate the cell system in which COX-2 expression is inhibited due to the expression of antisense COX-2. In both cell lines, celecoxib still effectively reduced levels of FLIPL and FLIPS, indicating that celecoxib modulates c-FLIP levels regardless of the presence of COX-2. Some nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs were reported to induce COX-2 expression (16, 17). However, the inducing effect of celecoxib on COX-2 expression has not been reported. Currently, it is unclear what the implications of COX-2 induction are in celecoxib-mediated anticancer activity.
Moreover, we used siRNA to knockdown COX-2 expression in A549 cells and then examined its effect on celecoxib-induced c-FLIP down-regulation. Transfection of COX-2 siRNA inhibited not only the basal levels of COX-2 but also celecoxib-mediated COX-2 induction. However, it did not alter the effect of celecoxib on reduction of c-FLIP (Fig. 2D), furthering the notion that celecoxib down-regulates c-FLIP expression levels irrespective of COX-2 expression. In addition, we examined the effect of 2,5-dimethyl-celecoxib, a derivative of celecoxib completely lacking COX-2 inhibitory activity (9), on c-FLIP expression and found that 2,5-dimethyl-celecoxib still decreased c-FLIP levels, albeit with more potency than celecoxib (Supplementary Fig. S2). This result again suggests that celecoxib reduces c-FLIP levels independent of its COX-2-inhibitory activity. Collectively, we conclude that celecoxib down-regulates c-FLIP expression independent of COX-2.
To determine the involvement of c-FLIP down-regulation in celecoxib-induced apoptosis, we used a lentiviral expression system to enforce expression of c-FLIP in nonsmall-cell lung cancer cell lines and then analyzed its effect on celecoxib-induced caspase activation and apoptosis. Taking advantage of a lentiviral expression system that can achieve both transient and stable gene expression, we first transiently expressed FLIPL or FLIPS in H1792 cells. By Western blotting, we could detect high levels of ectopic FLIPL or FLIPS (Fig. 3A ). Celecoxib induced cleavage of caspase-8, caspase-3, and poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase in lacZ-infected control cells, evidenced by the decrease in the levels of their pro-forms and the increase in the amounts of their cleaved bands. However, these effects were inhibited or diminished in cells infected with c-FLIP, particularly FLIPL (Fig. 3A). Consistently, we detected 34% apoptotic cells in lacZ-infected cells, but only 17% and 26% apoptosis in cells infected with FLIPL and FLIPS, respectively, by Annexin V staining (Fig. 3B). Thus, these results show partial protective effects of c-FLIP, particularly FLIPL, on celecoxib-induced apoptosis.
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We previously reported that celecoxib in combination with TRAIL augmented the induction of apoptosis in human nonsmall-cell lung cancer cells (4). To determine whether down-regulation of c-FLIP also contributes to synergy between celecoxib and TRAIL on apoptosis induction, we examined the effects of enforced overexpression of c-FLIP on celecoxib-mediated enhancement of TRAIL-induced apoptosis in two nonsmall-cell lung cancer cell lines. To this end, we further established H460 transfectants that overexpressed ectopic FLIPL and FLIPS (Fig. 4A
), in addition to the aforementioned H157 cells. In the two tested cell lines (i.e., H157 and H460), the combination of celecoxib and TRAIL induced more than additive effects on induction of apoptosis compared with each single agent in lacZ-infected control cells evaluated by Annexin V staining; however, these effects were either abrogated or inhibited in cells overexpressing c-FLIP, particularly FLIPL (Fig. 4B and C). For example, the combination of celecoxib and TRAIL caused
58% apoptosis in H157-lacZ-5 cells, but only 13% apoptosis in H157-FLIPL-6 cells and 17% apoptosis in H157-FLIPS-1 cells (Fig. 4C). Thus, these results collectively show that down-regulation of c-FLIP also contributes to celecoxib-mediated enhancement of TRAIL-induced apoptosis.
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10 µmol/L) required for celecoxib to down-regulate c-FLIP are higher than clinically achievable peak plasma concentrations (3.2-5.6 µmol/L) of celecoxib in humans after oral administration of a single dose of 800 mg (19). Given that celecoxib has been developed and marketed mainly for treatment of arthritis and pain, but not primarily for anticancer purposes, it is conceivable that this drug might be suboptimal for inclusion in the therapy of advanced cancers, such as nonsmall-cell lung cancer cells. In this regard, it might be beneficial to consider streamlined celecoxib derivatives that are optimized for anticancer applications, and some promising efforts have indeed been made in this direction. Certain novel non-COX-2 inhibitory celecoxib derivatives show better activity than celecoxib in inducing apoptosis and inhibiting the growth of tumors (9, 20), further emphasizing the need to explore and understand the underlying molecular mechanisms by which these drugs exert their proapoptotic, antitumor potential. In this regard, our finding that celecoxib and its COX-2-inactive derivative 2,5-dimethyl-celecoxib down-regulate c-FLIP provides a novel aspect of this process and is important for understanding the molecular mechanisms by which these drugs induce apoptosis. We noted that 2,5-dimethyl-celecoxib, which is more potent than celecoxib in down-regulating c-FLIP, was also more potent than celecoxib in decreasing cell survival and inducing apoptosis in human nonsmall-cell lung cancer cells,3 suggesting that there is a inverse relationship between down-regulation of c-FLIP and induction of apoptosis by celecoxib and its derivatives. Therefore, we may consider modulation of c-FLIP as a screening tool for the development of novel celecoxib derivatives with better anticancer efficacy. In conclusion, the present study shows for the first time that celecoxib down-regulates c-FLIP expression in human nonsmall-cell lung cancer cells; this down-regulation accounts for celecoxib-mediated induction of apoptosis and enhancement of TRAIL-induced apoptosis. These results complement our previous finding that the death receptormediated extrinsic apoptotic pathway plays a critical role in celecoxib-induced apoptosis in human lung cancer cells.
| Acknowledgments |
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The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked advertisement in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
We thank Dr. Steven M. Dubinett (University of California at Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA) for providing cell lines expressing antisense COX-2, Dr. Jürg Tschopp (University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland) for c-FLIP cDNAs, and Dr. Ceshi Chen (Albany Medical College, Albany, NY) for hemagglutinin-ubiquitin plasmid.
| Footnotes |
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F.R. Khuri and S-Y. Sun are Georgia Cancer Coalition Distinguished Cancer Scholars.
Received 7/ 7/06. Revised 9/27/06. Accepted 10/20/06.
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