Abstract

Small cell lung cancer (SCLC) is a difficult disease to treat and sometimes has overexpression or mutation of c-Met receptor tyrosine kinase. The effects of c-Met/hepatocyte growth factor (c-Met/HGF, ligand for c-Met) on activation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) was determined. HGF stimulation of c-Met-overexpressing H69 SCLC cells (40 ng/ml, 15 min) resulted in an increase of ROS, measured with fluorescent probe 2'-7'-dichlorofluorescein diacetate (DCFH-DA) or dihydroethidine (DHE) but not in c-Met-null H446 cells. ROS was increased in juxtamembrane (JM)-mutated variants (R988C and T1010I) of c-Met compared with wild-type c-Met-expressing cells. ROS was significantly inhibited by preincubation of SCLC cells with pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate (PDTC, 100 microM) and/or SU11274 (small molecule c-Met tyrosine kinase inhibitor, 2 microM) for 3 h. PDTC and SU11274 also abrogated the HGF proliferative signal and cell motility in a cooperative fashion. H(2)O(2) treatment of SCLC cells (over 15 min) led to phosphorylation of c-Met receptor tyrosine kinase and further upregulated downstream phosphorylation of phospho-AKT, ERK1/2, and paxillin in a dose-dependent manner (125 microM to 500 microM). c-Met is an important target in lung cancer, and the pathways responsible for ROS generation together may provide novel therapeutic intervention.

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