Abstract

The DNA damage response (DDR) is one of the most important mechanisms of platinum resistance in ovarian cancer. Some miRNAs have been identified to be involved in the regulatory network of DDR, thus the abnormal expression of miRNAs might affect platinum chemosensitivity in ovarian cancer. In this study, by assessing miRNAs simultaneously targeting a set of DDR genes that exhibited response to platinum, we found that miR-211 inhibited most of those genes, and proposed that miR-211 might affect the sensitivity of ovarian cancer cells to platinum by targeting multiple DDR genes and thereby determine the prognosis of ovarian cancer. To verify the hypothesis, we analyzed the association between miR-211 level and clinical prognosis, assessed the effect of miR-211 on DDR and platinum chemosensitivity, and explored the possible molecular mechanism. We revealed that miR-211 enhanced platinum chemosensitivity and was positively correlated with favorable outcomes in ovarian cancer patients. Many DDR genes including TDP1 were identified as targets of miR-211. In contrast, TDP1 suppressed DNA damage and platinum chemosensitivity. Moreover, the miR-211 level in tissues was shown to be associated with the good outcome of neoadjuvant chemotherapy and negatively correlated with the expression of TDP1. Conclusively, we demonstrated that miR-211 improves the prognosis of ovarian cancer patients by enhancing the chemosensitivity of cancer cells to platinum via inhibiting DDR gene expression, which provides an essential basis to identify novel treatment targets to block DDR effectively and improve chemosensitivity in ovarian cancer.

Highlights

  • Ovarian cancer is the leading cause of cancer death among gynecological malignancies[1]

  • We focused our study on miR-211 and enlarged the research scope of DNA damage response (DDR) genes targeted by miR-211 to explore the molecular mechanism

  • DDR is induced when the cells are treated with platinum[36], and the induction of DDR is one of the most important mechanisms for platinum resistance[37,38,39,40]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Ovarian cancer is the leading cause of cancer death among gynecological malignancies[1]. It was estimated that 22,240 cases of ovarian cancer would be newly diagnosed, and that 14,070 affected patients would die in America in 20182. The standard treatment for ovarian cancer is surgical operation followed by multiple cycles of platinum-. Many investigators have devoted themselves to the mechanism of chemoresistance. Numerous studies have shown that the enforced DNA damage response (DDR) is one of the most important mechanisms for resistance to chemotherapy-based platinum agents[7,8]. Patients with DDR deficiency exhibit a positive response to chemosensitivity. Official journal of the Cell Death Differentiation Association

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