Pneumologie 2005; 59 - P457
DOI: 10.1055/s-2005-864507

Candidate genes upregulated in density dependent growth inhibition of lung cancer cells

H Kuhn 1, J Bräunlich 1, S Hammerschmidt 1, H Wirtz 1
  • 1Medizinische Klinik I, Universitätsklinikum Leipzig, Abteilung Pneumologie

Prognosis of lung cancer remains poor despite the recent development of new chemotherapeutic agents. Novel therapeutic strategies therefore need to be developed. The search for endogenous factors inhibiting tumor growth in a paracrine/autocrine fashion might result in a well tolerated adjuvant tumor therapy. In this study we intended to identify candidate genes for such inhibitors of tumor cell growth. Native and heat inactivated supernatants of confluent, slow growing H460 tumor cell cultures and of sparse (non confluent), fast growing H460 tumor cell cultures were tested in proliferation assays. We observed that native supernatant of confluent H460 cells contains proteins inhibiting tumor cell growth of NSCLC cell lines. Microarray gene expression analysis of sparse and confluent H460 cells exhibited overexpression of seven candidate genes in confluent, slow growing cells. The products of these genes possess cell growth inhibitory function and also exist in the extracellular compartment. The increased expression level of these genes was verified using real-time RT-PCR analysis. Further investigations of these factors may result in the identification of autocrine/paracrine tumor cell growth inhibitory proteins for future use in clinical applications.