학술논문

Induction of HRR genes and inhibition of DNMT1 is associated with anthracycline anti-tumor antibiotic-tolerant breast carcinoma cells
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry. March, 2019, Vol. 453 Issue 1-2, p163, 16 p.
Subject
Genetic research
Anthracyclines
Methylation
Genes
Chemotherapy
Methyltransferases
Breast cancer -- Drug therapy
RNA
Antibiotics
Cancer treatment
Daunorubicin
Carcinoma
Biotechnology
Transferases
Tumors
DNA
Adjuvant chemotherapy
DNA repair
Language
English
ISSN
0300-8177
Abstract
The aim of the study was to understand the role of homologous recombination repair (HRR) pathway genes in development of chemotolerance in breast cancer (BC). For this purpose, chemotolerant BC cells were developed in MCF-7 and MDA MB 231 cell lines after treatment with two anthracycline anti-tumor antibiotics doxorubicin and nogalamycin at different concentrations for 48 h with differential cell viability. The drugs were more effective in MCF-7 (IC50: 0.214-0.242 [micro]M) than in MDA MB 231 (IC50: 0.346-0.37 [micro]M) as shown by cell viability assay. The drugs could reduce the protein expression of PCNA in the cell lines. Increased mRNA/protein expression of the HRR (BRCA1, BRCA2, FANCC, FANCD2, and BRIT1) genes was seen in the cell lines in the presence of the drugs at different concentrations (lower IC50, IC50, and higher IC50) irrespective of the cell viability (68-41%). Quantitative methylation assay showed an increased percentage of hypomethylation of the promoters of these genes after drug treatment in the cell lines. Similarly, chemotolerant neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT) treated primary BC samples showed significantly higher frequency of hypomethylation of the genes than the pretherapeutic BC samples. The drugs in different concentrations could reduce m-RNA and protein expression of DNMT1 (DNA methyltransferase 1) in the cell lines. Similar phenomenon was also evident in the NACT samples than in the pretherapeutic BC samples. Thus, our data indicate that reduced DNMT1 expression along with promoter hypomethylation and increased expression of the HRR genes might have importance in chemotolerance in BC.
Author(s): Hemantika Dasgupta [sup.1] , Md. Saimul Islam [sup.1] , Neyaz Alam [sup.2] , Anup Roy [sup.3] , Susanta Roychoudhury [sup.4] , Chinmay Kumar Panda [sup.1] Author Affiliations: (Aff1) grid.418573.c, [...]