Abstract

Previous work has shown that gap junction intercellular communication (GJIC) enhances cisplatin (Pt) toxicity in testicular tumor cells but decreases it in non-tumor testicular cells. In this study, these different GJIC-propagated effects were demonstrated in tumor versus non-tumor cells from other organ tissues (liver and lung). The downregulation of GJIC by several different manipulations (no cell contact, pharmacological inhibition, and siRNA suppression) decreased Pt toxicity in tumor cells but enhanced it in non-tumor cells. The in vivo results using xenograft tumor models were consistent with those from the above-mentioned cells. To better understand the mechanism(s) involved, we studied the effects of GJIC on Pt accumulation in tumor and non-tumor cells from the liver and lung. The intracellular Pt and DNA-Pt adduct contents clearly increased in non-tumor cells but decreased in tumor cells when GJIC was downregulated. Further analysis indicated that the opposite effects of GJIC on Pt accumulation in normal versus tumor cells from the liver were due to its different effects on copper transporter1 and multidrug resistance-associated protein2, membrane transporters attributed to intracellular Pt transfer. Thus, GJIC protects normal organs from cisplatin toxicity while enhancing it in tumor cells via its different effects on intracellular Pt transfer.

Highlights

  • To mediate protective effects against cellular stress in normal cells[16,17,18]

  • Further analysis indicated that the opposite effects of Gap junction intercellular communication (GJIC) on Pt accumulation in normal versus tumor cells from liver were due to its different effects on copper transporter 1 and multidrug resistance-associated protein 2, the membrane transporters attributed to intracellular Pt transfer

  • We investigated the effects of GJIC on cisplatin cytotoxicity in normal versus tumor cells from liver and lung tissues

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Our previous study demonstrated that the effect of GJIC on cisplatin toxicity differs between normal and tumor testicular cells: GJIC protects normal cells from cisplatin toxicity while enhancing it in tumor cells, suggesting that the enhancement/maintenance of GJIC increases therapeutic efficacy while decreasing off-target toxicity[19]. Whether these opposite effects of GJIC on normal and tumor testicular cells exist in cells from other organs and the exact mechanisms of the effects remain unclear. GJIC protects normal organs from cisplatin toxicity while enhancing it in tumor cells via its different effects on intracellular Pt transfer

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call