Synergistic apoptosis of human gastric cancer cells by bortezomib and TRAIL
Abstract
Resistance against tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL)-induced cell death of
cancer cells is a major obstacle in clinical application of TRAIL. Variable response to TRAIL of gastric
cancer cells, synergy of TRAIL with bortezomib and potential mechanisms behind the phenomena were
investigated in this study. The response to TRAIL varied among six gastric cancer cell lines, which
correlated with the expression of apoptotic TRAIL receptors. Analysis of TCGA gene expression data
showed that DR4 expression correlated with DR5 in gastric cancer. Although higher expression of DR4
was significantly associated with lower T, N and TNM stages, neither DR4 nor DR5 expression
meaningfully influenced overall survival rate. Combined treatment of TRAIL with bortezomib resulted in
strong synergistic response with enhanced activation of caspases-8, -9 and -3, and increased Annexin
V-binding cell fractions in TRAIL-resistant SNU-216 cells. Bortezomib increased the expression of
p21cip1/waf1, but p21cip1/waf1 silencing did not restore cell viability significantly. Bortezomib also increased
DR5 expression and knockdown of DR5 expression significantly recovered cell viability reduced by the
combination treatment. Bortezomib decreased phosphorylation of ERK1/2, but increased that of JNK.
Treatment with either an ERK1/2 inhibitor U0126 or a JNK inhibitor SP600125 rescued SNU-216 from
dying of bortezomib or combined treatment. However, upregulation of DR5 by bortezomib was knocked
down only by inhibition of ERK1/2 activation significantly, but not by JNK activity inhibition. In summary,
upregulation of DR5 by bortezomib is of critical significance in the synergy of bortezomib with TRAIL in
apoptosis of TRAIL-resistant SNU-216 and that activity of ERK1/2 is required in the bortezomib-induced
DR5 overexpression.