Abstract

BackgroundDrug resistance is the outcome of multiple-gene interactions in cancer cells under stress of anticancer agents. MDR1 overexpression is most commonly detected in drug-resistant cancers and accompanied with other gene alterations including enhanced glucosylceramide synthase (GCS). MDR1 encodes for P-glycoprotein that extrudes anticancer drugs. Polymorphisms of MDR1 disrupt the effects of P-glycoprotein antagonists and limit the success of drug resistance reversal in clinical trials. GCS converts ceramide to glucosylceramide, reducing the impact of ceramide-induced apoptosis and increasing glycosphingolipid (GSL) synthesis. Understanding the molecular mechanisms underlying MDR1 overexpression and how it interacts with GCS may find effective approaches to reverse drug resistance.ResultsMDR1 and GCS were coincidently overexpressed in drug-resistant breast, ovary, cervical and colon cancer cells; silencing GCS using a novel mixed-backbone oligonucleotide (MBO-asGCS) sensitized these four drug-resistant cell lines to doxorubicin. This sensitization was correlated with the decreased MDR1 expression and the increased doxorubicin accumulation. Doxorubicin treatment induced GCS and MDR1 expression in tumors, but MBO-asGCS treatment eliminated "in-vivo" growth of drug-resistant tumor (NCI/ADR-RES). MBO-asGCS suppressed the expression of MDR1 with GCS and sensitized NCI/ADR-RES tumor to doxorubicin. The expression of P-glycoprotein and the function of its drug efflux of tumors were decreased by 4 and 8 times after MBO-asGCS treatment, even though this treatment did not have a significant effect on P-glycoprotein in normal small intestine. GCS transient transfection induced MDR1 overexpression and increased P-glycoprotein efflux in dose-dependent fashion in OVCAR-8 cancer cells. GSL profiling, silencing of globotriaosylceramide synthase and assessment of signaling pathway indicated that GCS transfection significantly increased globo series GSLs (globotriaosylceramide Gb3, globotetraosylceramide Gb4) on GSL-enriched microdomain (GEM), activated cSrc kinase, decreased β-catenin phosphorylation, and increased nuclear β-catenin. These consequently increased MDR1 promoter activation and its expression. Conversely, MBO-asGCS treatments decreased globo series GSLs (Gb3, Gb4), cSrc kinase and nuclear β-catenin, and suppressed MDR-1 expression in dose-dependent pattern.ConclusionThis study demonstrates, for the first time, that GCS upregulates MDR1 expression modulating drug resistance of cancer. GSLs, in particular globo series GSLs mediate gene expression of MDR1 through cSrc and β-catenin signaling pathway.

Highlights

  • Drug resistance is the outcome of multiple-gene interactions in cancer cells under stress of anticancer agents

  • We have studied the effects of ceramide glycosylation on multidrug resistance 1 gene (MDR1) and found that glucosylceramide synthase (GCS) upregulates MDR1 expression through activation of cSrc and β-catenin signaling

  • Silencing GCS represses MDR1 expression and sensitizes cancer cells to chemotherapeutic agents We observed the role of GCS in the regulation of MDR1 expression in NCI/ADR-RES and its GCS transfectants

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Summary

Introduction

Drug resistance is the outcome of multiple-gene interactions in cancer cells under stress of anticancer agents. MDR1 overexpression is most commonly detected in drug-resistant cancers and accompanied with other gene alterations including enhanced glucosylceramide synthase (GCS). Understanding the molecular mechanisms underlying MDR1 overexpression and how it interacts with GCS may find effective approaches to reverse drug resistance. Drug resistance is the outcome of multiple-gene interactions in cancer cells under the stress of antineoplastic agents. Little is known about the molecular mechanism underlying MDR1 overexpression and how it interacts with other genes to impart drug-resistance. GCS (UDP-glucose:ceramide glucosyltransferase, UGCG) transfers a glucose residue from UDP-glucose to ceramide and produces glucosylceramide [19,20] This first step in glycosphingolipid (GSL) synthesis tightly regulates the production of all upstream GSLs [21]. We have studied the effects of ceramide glycosylation on MDR1 and found that GCS upregulates MDR1 expression through activation of cSrc and β-catenin signaling

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