scholarly journals Proteomic Analysis of miR-195 and miR-497 Replacement Reveals Potential Candidates that Increase Sensitivity to Oxaliplatin in MSI/P53wt Colorectal Cancer Cells

Cells ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (9) ◽  
pp. 1111 ◽  
Author(s):  
Poel ◽  
Boyd ◽  
Beekhof ◽  
Schelfhorst ◽  
Pham ◽  
...  

Most patients with advanced colorectal cancer (CRC) eventually develop resistance to systemic combination therapy. miR-195-5p and miR-497-5p are downregulated in CRC tissues and associated with drug resistance. Sensitization to 5-FU, oxaliplatin, and irinotecan by transfection with miR-195-5p and miR-497-5p mimics was studied using cell viability and clonogenic assays in cell lines HCT116, RKO, DLD-1, and SW480. In addition, proteomic analysis of transfected cells was implemented to identify potential targets. Significantly altered proteins were subjected to STRING (protein-protein interaction networks) database analysis to study the potential mechanisms of drug resistance. Cell viability analysis of transfected cells revealed increased sensitivity to oxaliplatin in microsatellite instable (MSI)/P53 wild-type HCT116 and RKO cells. HCT116 transfected cells formed significantly fewer colonies when treated with oxaliplatin. In sensitized cells, proteomic analysis showed 158 and 202 proteins with significantly altered expression after transfection with miR-195-5p and miR-497-5p mimics respectively, of which CHUK and LUZP1 proved to be coinciding downregulated proteins. Resistance mechanisms of these proteins may be associated with nuclear factor kappa-B signaling and G1 cell-cycle arrest. In conclusion, miR-195-5p and miR-497-5p replacement enhanced sensitivity to oxaliplatin in treatment naïve MSI/P53 wild-type CRC cells. Proteomic analysis revealed potential miRNA targets associated with the cell-cycle which possibly bare a relation with chemotherapy sensitivity.

Author(s):  
Suwisit MANMUAN ◽  
Ponwit MANMUAN ◽  
Punyo YOYKAEW ◽  
Piyachat THUETONG ◽  
Patchraporn ASIPONG ◽  
...  

Centella Asiatica has been traditionally used as herbal medicine to treat various disorders, such as ulcers and psoriatic disease. ECa233 is an herbal extract of Centella Asiatica containing madecassoside (46.3 %) and asiaticoside (41.6 %) that shows a highly acceptable safety profile appropriate for drug development and use as an herbal drug for humans. 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) is a chemotherapeutic agent generally known as the first-line chemotherapy for colorectal cancer. Representative combined chemotherapy with 5-FU, namely the FOLFOX regimen (5-FU, leucovorin, oxaliplatin), has been widely used in hospitals and is typically selected as a chemotherapeutic regimen in prescriptions. However, the unresolved problems appearing in clinical situations are the refusal to accept the chemotherapy leading to drug resistance and the severe side effects after being administered intravenously to the entire body. Therefore, the discovery of a novel pure standard agent to enhance the efficacy of 5-FU and overcome this drug resistance still needs to be explored. To assess the pharmacological activity and safety profile of ECa233 is a major goal in cancer drug discovery. ECa233 was evaluated for its anti-cancer, anti-migration, anti-invasive activities and was explored regarding the safety data on normal cells. The results demonstrated that ECa233 effectively inhibited the cell viability, colony forming, and truly inactivated cell migration/invasion through repressive the MMP-9 invasive factor. Pharmacological interaction with 5-FU was synergism in cancer cells and highly safe to normal cell growth. The results suggest that ECa233 could be used as a combinative drug therapy with standard chemotherapy treatment and other medicinal drugs such as a targeted therapy to treat colorectal cancer patients.


2017 ◽  
Vol 77 (12) ◽  
pp. 3364-3375 ◽  
Author(s):  
Federica Eduati ◽  
Victoria Doldàn-Martelli ◽  
Bertram Klinger ◽  
Thomas Cokelaer ◽  
Anja Sieber ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 836-836 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuan Xiao Zhu ◽  
Chang-Xin Shi ◽  
Patrick Jedlowski ◽  
Klaus Martin Kortum ◽  
Laura Ann Bruins ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction: Partial loss of chromosome arm 1p frequently occurs in multiple myeloma (MM), and is associated with a poor prognosis. Several minimally altered regions on 1p have been identified, including 1p32.3, 1p31.3, 1p22.1-1p21.3, and 1p12. Cytoband 1p12 was deleted in 19% of cases, and this deletion was associated with shorter overall survival (OS) in univariate analysis. The target of homozygous deletion 1p12 was FAM46C. In addition, mutations of FAM46C were identified in 3.4% to 13% of primary MM tumors and 25% of 16 human myeloma cell lines (HMCLs), implying its potential pathogenic relevance. In other work we have suggested that FAM46C mutation is a progression event and have shown that it is rarely seen in newly diagnosed del17 patients, inferring some overlap in function. However, there is no published functional annotation of FAM46C and its role in MM remains unknown. In the present study, we aimed to identify the biological role of FAM46C in myeloma cells. Materials/Method: The expression of FAM46C in HMCLs was analyzed by western blot. Lentiviral constructs expressing wild type and mutated FAM46C were generated and transduced into HMCLs, followed by cell viability assay and cell cycle analysis. Cells were harvested and processed to measure gene expression and cell signaling changes after introduction of FAM46C by mRNAseq, pathway analysis and immunoblotting assay. Results: The expression of FAM46C protein is generally low in most HMCLs. Introduction of wild type FAM46C in HMCLs induced a substantial cell growth inhibition and apoptosis, especially in two HMCLs including MM1.S and KMS11. Cell viability of KMS11 and MM1.S was reduced by 50% to 80% at day 6 after introduction of FAM46C, compared to 0-30% growth retardation detected in HMCLs and non-myeloma cell lines that do not carry FAM46C deletion. We identified 88 genes whose mRNA expression was significantly altered after enforced expression of FAM46C in MM1.S cells. Pathway analysis revealed that FAM46C-regulated genes are enriched in the canonical pathways associated with unfolded protein response, cell cycle control and DNA damage repair. Critical MM genes that are downregulated by FAM46C expression include IRF4 and MYC, which are also downstream targets of immunomodulatory drugs (IMiDs). Consistently, some HMCLs such as KMS11 and OPM2 show an enhanced sensitivity to lenalidomide after introduction of FAM46C. Next, lentiviral constructs expressing various FAM46C mutants were generated in order to understand the consequence of FAM46C mutation. The mutant constructs mimic mutations identified in MM patients or HMCLs. Those mutants and wild type FAM46C were transduced and tested together in MM1.S cells. We found that three published misssense mutations, one frame-shift mutation and deletion of the sequence between aa172 and aa186 of FAM46C (which has been found in previous studies as a hot spot of mutation) all abolished FAM46C-mediated anti-myeloma activity, thus would be expected to confer a MM cell survival advantage. Conclusion: Our data demonstrated that enforced FAM46C expression in myeloma cells induced myeloma growth inhibition and apoptosis. Mutations in FAM46C and TP53 in newly diagnosed patients seem mutually exclusive but not in relapsed patients from our patients sequencing studies, suggesting it may associate with disease progression. Together, these studies suggest that FAM46C may function as a tumor suppressor in myeloma. We also found that published mutations of FAM46C confer a survival advantage to MM cells, and that FAM46C overexpression downregulates IRF4 and MYC and is thus associated with loss of myeloma cell survival. Disclosures Stewart: Novartis: Consultancy; Oncospire Inc.: Equity Ownership; Celgene: Consultancy; BMS: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (1 (January)) ◽  
pp. 88-93
Author(s):  
Hasan KURTER ◽  
Janberk YEŞİL ◽  
Ezgi DASKIN ◽  
Gizem ÇALIBAŞI KOÇAL ◽  
Hülya ELLİDOKUZ ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sha Cao ◽  
Wennan Chang ◽  
Changlin Wan ◽  
Yong Zhang ◽  
Jing Zhao ◽  
...  

In light of the marked differences in the intrinsic biological underpinnings and prognostic outcomes among different subtypes, Consensus Molecular Subtype (CMS) classification provides a new taxonomy of colorectal cancer (CRC) solely based on transcriptomics data and has been accepted as a standard rule for CRC stratification. Even though CMS was built on highly cancer relevant features, it suffers from limitations in capturing the promiscuous mechanisms in a clinical setting. There are at least two facts about using transcriptomic data for prognosis prediction: the engagement of genes or pathways that execute the clinical response pathway are highly dynamic and interactive with others; and a predefined patient stratification not only largely decrease the statistical analysis power, but also excludes the fact that clusters of patients that confer similar clinical outcomes may or may not overlap with a pre-defined subgrouping. To enable a flexible and prospective stratified exploration, we here present a novel computational framework based on bi-clustering aiming to identify gene regulatory mechanisms associated with various biological, clinical and drug-resistance features, with full recognition of the transiency of transcriptional regulation and complicacies of patients subgrouping with regards to different biological and clinical settings. Our analysis on multiple large scale CRC transcriptomics data sets using a bi-clustering based formulation suggests that the detected local low rank modules can not only generate new biological understanding coherent to CMS stratification, but also identify predictive markers for prognosis that are general to CRC or CMS dependent, as well as novel alternative drug resistance mechanisms. Our key results include: (1) a comprehensive annotation of the local low rank module landscape of CRC; (2) a mechanistic relationship between different clinical subtypes and outcomes, as well as their characteristic biological underpinnings, visible through a novel consensus map; and (3) a few (novel) resistance mechanisms of Oxaliplatin, 5-Fluorouracil, and the FOLFOX therapy are revealed, some of which are validated on independent datasets.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexandros Georgiou ◽  
Adam Stewart ◽  
Georgios Vlachogiannis ◽  
Lisa Pickard ◽  
Nicola Valeri ◽  
...  

Abstract Purpose We hypothesised that plasticity in signal transduction may be a mechanism of drug resistance and tested this hypothesis in the setting of cetuximab resistance in patients with KRAS/NRAS/BRAFV600 wild-type colorectal cancer (CRC). Methods A multiplex antibody-based platform was used to study simultaneous changes in signal transduction of 55 phospho-proteins in 12 KRAS/NRAS/BRAFV600 wild-type CRC cell lines (6 cetuximab sensitive versus 6 cetuximab resistant) following 1 and 4 h in vitro cetuximab exposure. We validated our results in CRC patient samples (n = 4) using ex vivo exposure to cetuximab in KRAS/NRAS/BRAFV600 cells that were immunomagnetically separated from the serous effusions of patients with known cetuximab resistance. Results Differences in levels of phospho-proteins in cetuximab sensitive and resistant cell lines included reductions in phospho-RPS6 and phospho-PRAS40 in cetuximab sensitive, but not cetuximab resistant cell lines at 1 and 4 h, respectively. In addition, phospho-AKT levels were found to be elevated in 3/4 patient samples following ex vivo incubation with cetuximab for 1 h. We further explored these findings by studying the effects of combinations of cetuximab and two PI3K pathway inhibitors in 3 cetuximab resistant cell lines. The addition of PI3K pathway inhibitors to cetuximab led to a significantly higher reduction in colony formation capacity compared to cetuximab alone. Conclusion Our findings suggest activation of the PI3K pathway as a mechanism of cetuximab resistance in KRAS/NRAS/BRAFV600 wild-type CRC.


Author(s):  
Weilan Lan ◽  
Jinyan Zhao ◽  
Wujin Chen ◽  
Haixia Shang ◽  
Jun Peng ◽  
...  

Background: Anlotinib is a multi-target tyrosine kinase inhibitor that has been reported to have activity against colorectal cancer. However, the mechanisms of how anlotinib mediates drug-resistance of colorectal cancer have not been fully described. Particularly the potential mechanisms regarding to the inhibition of proliferation and induction of apoptosis remain unknown. Objective: In this study, we intended to study the effect and related-mechanism of the proliferation, migration, invasion and induced apoptosis of anlotinib overcoming multidrug resistant colorectal cancer cells through in vitro experiments. Methods: Cell viability was determined by MTT assays and the resistant index was calculated. Colony formation and PI/RNase Staining were used for testing the proliferation of resistant cells. DAPI staining and Annexin V-FITC/PI staining were used to detect cell apoptosis. Migration and invasion were examined by transwell. Protein expression and activation of PI3K/AKT pathway were detected by western blot. LY294002 was used to verify whether anlotinib overcomes the drug-resistance of CRC cells by inactivating the PI3K/AKT pathway. Results: The results showed that the HCT-8/5-FU cells were resistant to multiple chemotherapy drugs (5-FU, ADM and DDP). Anlotinib significantly inhibited the cell viability, proliferation, migration, invasion and induced the cell apoptosis. Moreover, anlotinib downregulated the expression of survivin, cyclin D1, CDK4, caspase-3, Bcl-2, MMP-2, MMP-9, vimentin and N-cadherin, but up-regulated cleaved-caspase-3, Bax and E-cadherin and blocked the activity of the PI3K/AKT in HCT-8/5-FU cells. We found anlotinib and LY294002 overcame the drug resistance of HCT-8/5-FU cells by reducing the expression of PI3K/p-AKT. Conclusions: Anlotinib inhibited the proliferation, migration, invasion and induced apoptosis of HCT-8/5-FU cells, and the mechanisms may be that anlotinib conquered multidrug resistance of colorectal cancer cells via inactivating of PI3K/AKT pathway.


2017 ◽  
Vol 35 (4_suppl) ◽  
pp. 642-642 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jan Stenvang ◽  
Christine Hjorth Andreassen ◽  
Nils Brünner

642 Background: In metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) only 3 cytotoxic drugs (oxaliplatin, irinotecan and fluorouracil (5-FU)) are approved and the first and second line response rates are about 50% and 10-15%, respectively. Thus, new treatment options are needed. Novel anti-cancer drug candidates are primarily tested in an environment of drug resistance and the majority of novel drug candidates fail during clinical development. Therefore, “repurposing” of drugs has emerged as a promising strategy to apply established drugs in novel indications. The aim of this project was to screen established anti-cancer drugs to identify candidates for testing in mCRC patients relapsing on standard therapy. Methods: We applied 3 parental (drug sensitive) CRC cell lines (HCT116, HT29 and LoVo) and for each cell line also an oxaliplatin and irinotecan (SN38) resistant cell line. We obtained 129 FDA approved anti-cancer drugs from the Developmental Therapeutics Program (DTP) at the National Cancer Institute (NCI) ( https://dtp.cancer.gov/ ). The parental HT29 cell line and the drug resistant sublines HT29-SN38 and HT29-OXPT were exposed to 3 concentrations of each of the anti-cancer drugs. The effect on cell viability was analyzed by MTT assays. Nine of the drugs were analyzed for effect in the LoVo and HCT116 and the SN38- and oxaliplatin-resistant derived cell lines. Results: None of the drugs caused evident differential response between the resistant and sensitive cells or between the SN38 and oxaliplatin resistant cells. The screening confirmed the resistance as the cells displayed resistance to drugs in the same class as the one they were made resistant to. Of the drugs, 45 decreased cell viability in the HT29 parental and oxaliplatin- or SN-38 resistant cell lines. Nine drugs were tested in all nine CRC cell lines and eight decrease cell viability in the nine cell lines. These included drugs in different classes such as epigenetic drugs, antibiotics, mitotic inhibitors and targeted therapies. Conclusions: This study revealed several possible new “repurposing” drugs for CRC therapy, by showing that 45 FDA-approved anti-cancer drugs decrease cell viability in CRC cell lines with acquired drug resistance.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 2574-2574
Author(s):  
Ilaria Iacobucci ◽  
Federica Cattina ◽  
Silvia Pomella ◽  
Annalisa Lonetti ◽  
Anna Ferrari ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 2574 Recently, using genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphism arrays and gene candidate deep exon sequencing, we identified lesions in CDKN2A gene, encoding p16/INK4A and p14/ARF tumor suppressors, in 27% (32/117) adult newly diagnosed Philadelphia-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia (Ph+ ALL) patients and in 47% (14/30) relapsed cases. Clinically, in our cohort CDKN2A deletions were associated by univariate analysis to a worse outcome in terms of overall survival (OS), disease-free survival (DFS) and cumulative incidence of relapse (CIR) (OS: 27.7 vs 38.2 months, p = 0.0206; DFS: 10.1 vs. 56.1 months, p = 0.0010; CIR: 73.3 vs 38.1, p = 0.0014). Noteworthy, the negative prognostic impact of CDKN2A deletion on DFS was also confirmed by the multivariate analysis (p = 0.0051). These results showed that there are genetically distinct Ph+ ALL patients with a different risk of leukemia relapse and that testing for CDKN2A alterations at diagnosis may help in risk stratification. Furthermore, since the loss of CDKN2A eliminates the critical tumor surveillance mechanism and allows proliferation and tumor cell growth by the action of MDM2, a negative regulator of p53, we investigated the preclinical activity of the MDM2 antagonist RG7112 in primary B-ALL patient samples and leukemic cell line models. BV-173, SUPB-15 and K562 Ph+ cell lines were incubated with increasing concentration of RG7112 (0.5–10 μM) and its inactive enantiomer for 24, 48 and 72 hours (hrs). MDM2 inhibition by RG7112 resulted in a dose and time-dependent cytotoxicity with IC50 (24 hrs) of 2 μM for BV-173 and SUPB-15 which harbor homozygous deletion of CDKN2A but wild-type p53. No significant changes in cell viability were observed in K562 p53-null cell line after incubation with RG7112. The time and dose-dependent reduction in cell viability were confirmed in primary blast cells from a Ph+ ALL patient with the T315I Bcr-Abl kinase domain mutation found to be insensitive to the available tyrosine kinase inhibitors and from a t(4;11)-positive ALL patient (IC50 at 24 hrs equal to 2 μM). Consistent with the results of cell viability, Annexin V/Propidium Iodide analysis showed a significant increase in apoptosis after 24 hrs in BV-173, SUPB-15 and in primary leukemia blasts, whereas no apoptosis was observed in K562 cells. To examine the possible mechanisms underlying RG7112-mediated cell death, western blot analysis was performed. Protein levels of p53, p21 (an important mediator of p53-dependent cell cycle arrest), cleaved caspase-3 and caspase-9 proteins increased upon treatment with RG7112 after 24 hrs of incubation with concentrations equal to the IC50. These data demonstrate the ability of RG7112 to activate the intrinsic apoptotic pathway by a p53-dependent mechanism. In order to better elucidate the implications of p53 activation and to identify biomarkers of clinical activity, gene expression profiling analysis (Affymetrix GeneChip Human Gene 1.0 ST) was next performed, comparing sensitive cell lines (BV-173 and SUPB-15) after 24 hrs exposure to 2 μM RG7112 and their untreated counterparts (DMSO 0.1%). A total of 621 genes (48% down-regulated vs 52% up-regulated) were differentially expressed (p < 0.05). They include genes involved in cell cycle and apoptosis control (e.g. Histone H1, TOP2, GAS41, H2AFZ) and in the down-regulation of the Hedgehog signaling (e.g. BMI1, BMP7, CDKN1C, POU3F1, CTNNB1, PTCH2) with a strong repression of stemness genes and re-activation of INK4/ARF as illustrated in Figure 1. Actually, both GAS41 (growth-arrest specific 1 gene) and BMI1 (a polycomb ring-finger oncogene) are repressors of INK4/ARF and p21 and their aberrant expression has found to contribute to stem cell state in tumor cells. In our data they were strongly down-regulated (fold-change −1.35 and −1.11, respectively; p-value 0.02 and 0.03, respectively) after in vitro treatment as compared to control cells, suggesting that these genes have a potential as new biomarkers of activity. In conclusion, inhibition of the p53–MDM2 interaction by RG7112 can activate the p53 pathway, resulting in apoptosis and inhibition of stemness genes in B-ALL with wild-type p53. Our findings provide a strong rational for further clinical investigation of RG7112 in Ph+ ALL. Supported by: ELN, AIL, AIRC, Fondazione Del Monte di Bologna e Ravenna, FIRB 2006, Ateneo RFO grants, Project of integrated program, Programma di Ricerca Regione–Università 2007–2009. Disclosures: Baccarani: Novartis: Consultancy; Bristol Myers Squibb: Consultancy; Novartis: Honoraria; Bristol Myers Squibb: Honoraria; Pfizer: Honoraria; Ariad: Honoraria. Martinelli:Novartis: Consultancy, Honoraria; BMS: Consultancy, Honoraria; Pfizer: Consultancy.


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