Regulation of human head and neck squamous cell carcinoma growth in tissue culture by opioid growth factor.
Journal
  International journal of oncology.
Citation
  Int J Oncol. 14(5):991-8
Publication date
  1999 May
Authors
  McLaughlin PJ
Levin RJ
Zagon IS
Investigators
  Patricia J. McLaughlin
Ian S. Zagon
MeSH headings
  Carcinoma, Squamous Cell
Enkephalins
Head and Neck Neoplasms
Narcotic Antagonists
Receptors, Opioid
MeSH qualifiers
  pathology
pharmacology
metabolism
Abstract
  Squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck (SCCHN) is the sixth most common malignancy worldwide. Approximately half of the patients afflicted die within 5 years of diagnosis, and surviving patients may be left with severe esthetic and functional compromise. In this study, we discovered that an endogenous opioid peptide, [Met5]-enkephalin, inhibited the growth of human SCCHN in vitro; in view of this pentapeptide's action it has been termed opioid growth factor (OGF). OGF was found to be a constitutively expressed, receptor-mediated growth inhibitory agent that appears to be autocrine produced and secreted. Growth regulation was dose-related, reversible, cytostatic, and independent of serum. All 6 human SCCHN cell lines examined exhibited growth modulation by OGF. Blockade of peptide-receptor interaction by opioid antagonists (naltrexone), or addition of antibody to OGF, resulted in substantial increases in cell number compared to control levels, showing the tonic nature of OGF-zeta activity. Immunocytochemical studies detected both OGF and its related receptor, zeta, in these cells, correlating with earlier findings of peptide and receptor in specimens of SCCHN obtained at surgery. These data suggest that a native opioid peptide, OGF, interacts with a novel opioid receptor, zeta, to tonically arrest the growth of human SCCHN.
Medline ID
  99218383