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Anticancer chemotherapy and radiotherapy trigger both non-cell-autonomous and cell-autonomous death.

Authors :
Martins I
Raza SQ
Voisin L
Dakhli H
Allouch A
Law F
Sabino D
De Jong D
Thoreau M
Mintet E
Dugué D
Piacentini M
Gougeon ML
Jaulin F
Bertrand P
Brenner C
Ojcius DM
Kroemer G
Modjtahedi N
Deutsch E
Perfettini JL
Source :
Cell death & disease [Cell Death Dis] 2018 Jun 18; Vol. 9 (7), pp. 716. Date of Electronic Publication: 2018 Jun 18.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Even though cell death modalities elicited by anticancer chemotherapy and radiotherapy have been extensively studied, the ability of anticancer treatments to induce non-cell-autonomous death has never been investigated. By means of multispectral imaging flow-cytometry-based technology, we analyzed the lethal fate of cancer cells that were treated with conventional anticancer agents and co-cultured with untreated cells, observing that anticancer agents can simultaneously trigger cell-autonomous and non-cell-autonomous death in treated and untreated cells. After ionizing radiation, oxaliplatin, or cisplatin treatment, fractions of treated cancer cell populations were eliminated through cell-autonomous death mechanisms, while other fractions of the treated cancer cells engulfed and killed neighboring cells through non-cell-autonomous processes, including cellular cannibalism. Under conditions of treatment with paclitaxel, non-cell-autonomous and cell-autonomous death were both detected in the treated cell population, while untreated neighboring cells exhibited features of apoptotic demise. The transcriptional activity of p53 tumor-suppressor protein contributed to the execution of cell-autonomous death, yet failed to affect the non-cell-autonomous death by cannibalism for the majority of tested anticancer agents, indicating that the induction of non-cell-autonomous death can occur under conditions in which cell-autonomous death was impaired. Altogether, these results reveal that chemotherapy and radiotherapy can induce both non-cell-autonomous and cell-autonomous death of cancer cells, highlighting the heterogeneity of cell death responses to anticancer treatments and the unsuspected potential contribution of non-cell-autonomous death to the global effects of anticancer treatment.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2041-4889
Volume :
9
Issue :
7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Cell death & disease
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
29915308
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41419-018-0747-y