Abstract

A low proliferating fraction in solid tumors limits the effectiveness of cell cycle-dependent chemotherapeutic agents. To understand the molecular basis of such "kinetic" resistance we cultured tumor cells as multicellular spheroids and examined levels of p27Kip1, a cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor known to be upregulated by intercellular contact in normal cells. When transferred from monolayer to three-dimensional culture, a consistent upregulation (up to 15-fold) of p27 protein was observed in a panel of mouse and human carcinoma cell lines. Antisense-oligonucleotide-mediated downregulation of p27 in EMT-6 mammary tumor cell spheroids reduced intercellular adhesion, increased cell proliferation, sensitized tumor cells to 4-hydroperoxycyclophosphamide, and restored drug- or radiation-induced cell-cycle perturbations repressed in spheroid culture. Our results implicate p27 as a regulator of drug resistance in solid tumors and suggest that tumor-targeted p27 antagonists may be useful chemosensitizers in conjunction with conventional anticancer therapy.

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