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Blood, 1 December 2006, Vol. 108, No. 12, pp. 3634.

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InsideBlood

HEMATOPOIESIS

Comment on Fas et al, page 3700

A TRAIL to Chinese herbal medicine

Peter T. Daniel

HUMBOLDT UNIVERSITY

With apoptosis-targeting therapies coming of age, the report by Li-Weber and colleagues provides a novel molecular rationale for the evaluation of substances derived from traditional medicinal herbs in combination with biologicals to achieve a better response in anticancer therapy.

Here, the anti-inflammatory flavonoid wogonin is demonstrated to overcome a central, NF-{kappa}B–mediated resistance mechanism in TRAIL (TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand)–induced apoptosis. Wogonin, derived from the traditional Chinese herbal medicine Huang-Qin (Baikal skullcap, Scutellaria baicalensis), strongly synergizes with TRAIL- or TNF{alpha}–induced apoptosis. This is achieved by shifting the cellular redox equilibrium to a more reduced state. Wogonin thereby attenuates NF-{kappa}B activity and interferes with antiapoptotic stress responses that follow death receptor ligation. Notably, wogonin spared nonmalignant cells, indicating promising perspectives for a clinical setting. This has important implications, as clinical trials targeting receptors for the death ligand TRAIL (Apo-2L) have been initiated. Whereas the natural ligand TRAIL (AMG-951) itself has only recently entered phase 1 trials, clinical development of agonistic TRAIL-mimicking antibodies is more advanced. Mapatumumab (HGS-ETR1) is an agonistic antibody against the TRAIL receptor I (death receptor 4, DR4). Phase 2 clinical trials of mapatumumab (HGS-ETR1) as monotherapy have been completed in patients with non-Hodgkin lymphoma, advanced colorectal cancer, and non–small cell lung cancer, and a randomized phase 2 study of HGS-ETR1 in combination with bortezomib in multiple myeloma is under way. Antibodies targeting TRAIL receptor II (DR5), HGS-ETR2, and HGS-TR2J are in phase 1. Results from these studies confirm a low toxicity profile but indicate at the same time that monotherapy targeting TRAIL receptors has only limited efficacy. This was expected, given the high rate of TRAIL-resistant tumor cell lines. Nevertheless, a far better, synergistic tumor cell killing can be achieved by combinations of TRAIL or the agonistic anti-DR4 and -DR5 antibodies with conventional chemo- or radiotherapy or some of the novel, targeted therapies including bortezomib.1-3

NF-{kappa}B–driven, antiapoptotic signaling by death receptors has only recently been recognized. Ligation of death receptors by their natural ligands or agonistic antibodies triggers a death signal through formation of a death-inducing signaling complex consisting of the receptor itself, the adaptor FADD binding to the cytosolic death domain, and an inducer caspase (caspase-8 and/or -10) that is recruited via the death effector domain found in both FADD and the caspase. In parallel, recruitment of TRAF family proteins via the adaptor TRADD promotes activation of the NF-{kappa}B pathway that triggers survival signals by inducing expression of antiapoptotic factors. Whereas Bcl-2, Bcl-xL, and Bfl-1 interfere with the intrinsic, mitochondrial apoptosis machinery, induction of FLIP proteins blocks the extrinsic death pathway through interference with caspase-8 binding and activity. This allows cells with a dominant NF-{kappa}B signal to evade death receptor–triggered apoptosis. Such antiapoptotic signaling becomes even more critical in cancer cells where cell death programs are often disturbed.2,3 In fact, there is evidence that many cancer cells even use antiapoptotic signaling by death receptors to promote growth and metastasis.4,5 Overcoming this survival strategy has important implications for the clinical use of TRAIL receptor–targeting drugs.

The author declares no competing financial interests. {blacksquare}

References

  1. Marini P, Denzinger S, Schiller D, et al. Combined treatment of colorectal tumours with agonistic TRAIL receptor antibodies HGS-ETR1 and HGS-ETR2 and radiotherapy: enhanced effects in vitro and dose-dependent growth delay in vivo. Oncogene. 2006;25: 5145-5154.[Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]

  2. Wendt J, von Haefen C, Hemmati P, Belka C, Dörken B, Daniel PT. TRAIL sensitizes for ionizing irradiation-induced apoptosis through an entirely Bax-dependent mitochondrial cell death pathway. Oncogene. 2005;24: 4052-4064.[Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]

  3. von Haefen C, Gillissen B, Hemmati PG, et al. Multidomain Bcl-2 homolog Bax but not Bak mediates synergistic induction of apoptosis by TRAIL and 5-FU through the mitochondrial apoptosis pathway. Oncogene. 2004;23: 8320-8332.[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]

  4. Barnhart BC, Legembre P, Pietras E, Bubici C, Franzoso G, Peter ME. CD95 ligand induces motility and invasiveness of apoptosis-resistant tumor cells. EMBO J. 2004;23: 3175-3185.[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]

  5. Trauzold A, Siegmund D, Schniewind B, et al. TRAIL promotes metastasis of human pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma. Oncogene. Prepublished on June 5, 2006, as DOI 10.1038/sj.onc.1209719.


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Related Article in Blood Online:

Wogonin sensitizes resistant malignant cells to TNF{alpha}- and TRAIL-induced apoptosis
Stefanie C. Fas, Sven Baumann, Jia Yun Zhu, Marco Giaisi, Monika K. Treiber, Ulrich Mahlknecht, Peter H. Krammer, and Min Li-Weber
Blood 2006 108: 3700-3706. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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