Expression and functional activity of heat shock proteins in human glioblastoma multiforme
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Abstract
Objective: To assess the expression of heat shock proteins (HSP) in glioma cells in vitro and in vivo and to examine their role in resistance to apoptosis.
Background: HSP are expressed in response to various forms of stress. Constitutive HSP expression may confer resistance to cytotoxic stimuli in human cancers.
Methods: HSP expression was assessed by immunoblot analysis in glioma cells in vitro and by immunocytochemistry in human glioblastomas in vivo. Modulation of apoptosis by hyperthermia-mediated HSP induction was examined in glioma cell lines in vitro.
Results: Immunoblot analysis revealed constitutive expression of HSP27, HSP72, HSP73, and HSP90 in all 12 human glioma cell lines. αB-crystallin (αBC) was expressed in 3 of 12 cell lines. High levels of αBC and HSP72 correlated with drug resistance and high p53 levels in vitro. Transient hyperthermia (43 °C/2 hours) induced HSP27 and HSP72 expression but had no effect on the levels of αBC, HSP73, or HSP90. HSP induction provided no survival advantage against subsequent cytotoxic challenges, including cytotoxic cytokines and radiochemotherapy. Immunohistochemistry showed strong expression of all HSP in vivo. The comparative analysis of HSP27, αBC, HSP72, HSP73, and HSP90 expression in 24 paired samples of first resections and recurrences of human glioblastoma multiforme revealed no impact of HSP expression on response to adjuvant radiochemotherapy and no modulation of HSP expression by radiochemotherapy.
Conclusions: High constitutive, as opposed to inducible, expression of HSP may play a role in the primary resistance of human malignant gliomas to cytotoxic radiochemotherapy. Superinduction of HSP levels by hyperthermia in vitro provided no further survival advantage.
- Received July 23, 1999.
- Accepted November 19, 1999.
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