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    Clin Cancer Res. 1998 Nov;4(11):2647-55.

    Inhibition of tumor growth by a dominant negative mutant of the insulin-like growth factor I receptor with a bystander effect.

    Reiss K, D'Ambrosio C, Tu X, Tu C, Baserga R.

    Kimmel Cancer Center, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19107, USA.

    The insulin-like growth factor I receptor is known to play a major role in transformation and apoptosis. The dominant negative mutant of the insulin-like growth factor I receptor, designated 486/STOP, causes massive apoptosis of tumor cells and inhibition of tumor growth and metastases. We now show that: (a) the stable expression of 486/STOP inhibits transformation (colony formation in soft agar) and/or tumor growth in nude mice of five different types of human tumor cell lines; and (b) more importantly, it has a bystander effect, inhibiting the growth of wild-type tumor cells when cells expressing 486/STOP are coinjected with wild-type tumor cells. These findings suggest that it is not necessary to infect all tumor cells with 486/STOP to inhibit tumor growth, and they also open the possibility of using the product of 486/STOP directly against tumor cells.

    PMID: 9829727 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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