Abstract

Retinoids have been shown to inhibit the growth of many human tumor cells including breast, ovarian and squamous cell carcinoma (SCC). While the exact mechanism of retinoid mediated growth suppression is not known, a role for the retinoic acid receptors (RARs) and retinoid X receptors (RXRs) has been established in both the breast and ovarian tumor cell models. We set out to determine if modulation of RAR/RXR function would alter the retinoid sensitivity of oral SCC cells. We found that the growth of SCC cells was significantly inhibited by treatment with either all-trans-retinoic acid (trans-RA) or the synthetic, conformationally restricted RARgamma selective retinoids MM11254 and MM11389. In order to demonstrate a role for RAR/RXR function in this process, stable oral SCC cell clones constitutively overexpressing the dominant negative mutant RARbeta2 (R269Q) were prepared and shown to exhibit reduced RAR/RXR transcriptional transactivation activity. We found that oral SCC cells exhibiting reduced RAR/RXR function became resistant to growth inhibition by all-trans-RA, MM11254 and MM11389. Likewise, treatment of oral SCC cells with the RARgamma antagonist MM11253 was found to block the ability of MM11254 and MM11389 to inhibit SCC cell growth. Thus, modulation of RAR function through the use of RAR-gamma selective agonists, an RAR-gamma selective antagonist or a pan-RAR dominant negative mutant significantly alters the growth inhibitory response of oral SCC cells to retinoids.

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