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Title: Antisense inhibition of parathyroid hormone-related peptide gene expression reduces malignant pituitary tumor progression and metastases in the rat. Author: Akino K, Ohtsuru A, Yano H, Ozeki S, Namba H, Nakashima M, Ito M, Matsumoto T, Yamashita S. Journal: Cancer Res; 1996 Jan 01; 56(1):77-86. PubMed ID: 8548779. Abstract: A newly established metastatic rat pituitary tumor (mGH3) possesses a malignant phenotype that is invasive and hypervascular compared with the original GH3 tumors. mGH3 cells exhibit anchorage independence and expression of elevated levels of parathyroid hormone-related peptide (PTHrP) in vitro. To clarify the role of PTHrP in the development of the malignant phenotype, tumor cells were treated with phosphorothioate antisense PTHrP oligonucleotide. Treatment with antisense PTHrP resulted in a scattering phenomenon in the colony formation assay but did not inhibit cell growth in vitro. Inoculation of mGH3 cells in the cerebral ventricle resulted in a rapid growth of tumor cells within 3 weeks and dissemination throughout the entire ventricular system. Although treatment with sense or mismatched PTHrP oligonucleotide did not influence the subsequent tumor growth, the in vivo coinjection and injection of antisense PTHrP 1 week after tumor cell implantation into the right lateral ventricle markedly reduced tumor size and suppressed metastasis formation. The survival rate of mGH3 tumor-injected rats was prolonged by antisense PTHrP therapy. Our results demonstrated the biological involvement of PTHrP in malignant phenotype in rat pituitary tumors, suggesting that antisense PTHrP may provide a novel antimetastatic therapy for malignant somatotroph tumors.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]