Abstract

The chemotherapeutic effects of all-trans-retinoic acid (atRA) are mediated by the retinoic acid receptor beta (RARbeta), but RARbeta expression is reduced in a number of head and neck carcinoma (HNSCC) cells which causes resistance to RA treatment in half the patients with HNSCC. The possible mechanism for the reduced RARbeta expression has been suggested as the methylation of the CpG islands adjacent to the RA response elements (RARE) in the RARbeta promoter and the loss of histone acetylation. The suppressed RARbeta expression can be reactivated by a demethylating agent (5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine, 5-AzaC) or a histone deacetylase inhibitor (trichostatin A, TSA). Therefore, we sought to determine if the restoration of RARbeta activity, or a combination of these drugs, could restore the sensitivity to RA in RARbeta-negative HNSCC cells with an epigenetically methylated RARbeta promoter region. SqCC/Y1 cells resistant to atRA showed methylated and unmethylated forms in the RARbeta promoter region. RARbeta expression of these cells was restored by 5-AzaC or TSA treatment. Also, treatment with TSA and atRA combined synergistically increased the growth-inhibitory effect and highly induced the transcriptional activation of the RARbeta promoter compared to atRA treatment in HNSCC cells. Additionally, TSA alone and the combination 5-AzaC and TSA increased lysine-9 (Lys-9) acetylation and Lys-4 methylation of the first exon at the RARbeta gene, while decreasing the methylation of Lys-9 in the HNSCC cells.

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