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Lymphotoxin‐β receptor activation by lymphotoxin‐α 1 β 2 and LIGHT promotes tumor growth in an NFκB‐dependent manner
Author(s) -
Daller Barbara,
Müsch Werner,
Röhrl Johann,
Tumanov Alexei V.,
Nedospasov Sergei A.,
Männel Daniela N.,
SchneiderBrachert Wulf,
Hehlgans Thomas
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
international journal of cancer
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.475
H-Index - 234
eISSN - 1097-0215
pISSN - 0020-7136
DOI - 10.1002/ijc.25456
Subject(s) - lymphotoxin , fibrosarcoma , lymphotoxin beta receptor , biology , cancer research , lymphotoxin alpha , microbiology and biotechnology , nf κb , angiogenesis , signal transduction , chemistry , tumor necrosis factor alpha , immunology , genetics
Lymphotoxin beta receptor (LTβR) activation on mouse fibrosarcoma cells (BFS‐1) results in enhanced solid tumor growth paralleled by increased angiogenesis induced by the expression of pro‐angiogenic CXCL2. In our study, we demonstrate that both functional ligands of the LTβR, namely LTα 1 β 2 and LIGHT, are involved in the activation of LTβR in solid fibrosarcomas. To identify whether the lymphocyte population is involved in the activation of LTβR in these fibrosarcoma tumors, we used conditional LTβ‐deficient mice that specifically lack LTβ expression either on T cells (T‐LTβ −/− ) or on B cells (B‐LTβ −/− ). Solid tumor growth was reduced in both mouse strains when compared to tumor growth in wild‐type mice, indicating the participation of both T and B host lymphocytes in the activation of LTβR in these tumors. Tumor growth was also reduced in LIGHT‐deficient mice, suggesting a contribution of this ligand to the activation of LTβR in BFS‐1 fibrosarcomas. LTβR signaling can involve IκBα and/or NFκB‐inducing kinase (NIK) for subsequent NFκB activation in different types of cells. Expression of a dominant negative form of IκBα or of a dominant negative mutant of NIK resulted in decreased activation of NFκB signaling and reduced expression of pro‐angiogenic CXCL2 in vitro . Moreover, expression of dominant negative form of NIK or an IκBα repressor in these fibrosarcoma cells resulted in reduced solid tumor growth in vivo , suggesting that both IκBα and NIK are involved in pro‐angiogenic signaling after LTβR activation. Our data support the idea that the ablation of LTβR signaling should be considered for cancer treatment.