Abstract

Chemotherapy is the mainstream treatment modality for invasive breast cancer. Unfortunately, chemotherapy-associated adverse events can result in early termination of treatment. Paradoxical effects of chemotherapy are also sometimes observed, whereby prolonged exposure to high doses of chemotherapeutic agents results in malignant states resistant to chemotherapy. In this study, potential synergism between doxorubicin (DOX) and pulsed electromagnetic field (PEMF) therapy was investigated in: 1) MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 cells in vitro; 2) MCF-7 tumors implanted onto a chicken chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) and; 3) human patient-derived and MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 breast cancer xenografts implanted into NOD-SCID gamma (NSG) mice. In vivo, synergism was observed in patient-derived and breast cancer cell line xenograft mouse models, wherein PEMF exposure and DOX administration individually reduced tumor size and increased apoptosis and could be augmented by combined treatments. In the CAM xenograft model, DOX and PEMF exposure also synergistically reduced tumor size as well as reduced Transient Receptor Potential Canonical 1 (TRPC1) channel expression. In vitro, PEMF exposure alone impaired the survival of MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 cells, but not that of non-malignant MCF10A breast cells; the selective vulnerability of breast cancer cells to PEMF exposure was corroborated in human tumor biopsy samples. Stable overexpression of TRPC1 enhanced the vulnerability of MCF-7 cells to both DOX and PEMF exposure and promoted proliferation, whereas TRPC1 genetic silencing reduced sensitivity to both DOX and PEMF treatments and mitigated proliferation. Chronic exposure to DOX depressed TRPC1 expression, proliferation, and responses to both PEMF exposure and DOX in a manner that was reversible upon removal of DOX. TRPC1 channel overexpression and silencing positively correlated with markers of epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT), including SLUG, SNAIL, VIMENTIN, and E-CADHERIN, indicating increased and decreased EMT, respectively. Finally, PEMF exposure was shown to attenuate the invasiveness of MCF-7 cells in correlation with TRPC1 expression. We thus demonstrate that the expression levels of TRPC1 consistently predicted breast cancer sensitivity to DOX and PEMF interventions and positively correlated to EMT status, providing an initial rationale for the use of PEMF-based therapies as an adjuvant to DOX chemotherapy for the treatment of breast cancers characterized by elevated TRPC1 expression levels.

Highlights

  • Breast cancer is the leading cause of cancer-associated death for women worldwide [1]

  • Given previous evidence demonstrating that PEMF exposure modulates Transient Receptor Potential Canonical 1 (TRPC1) function [5], we examined whether TRPC1 expression level predicts breast cancer vulnerability to DOX and PEMF treatments

  • We demonstrate that the vulnerability of breast cancer to PEMF and DOX therapies is positively correlated with TRPC1 expression as are invasiveness and epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) (Figure 9), conferring upon them a heightened level of specificity for TRPC1-characterized cancers

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Summary

Introduction

Breast cancer is the leading cause of cancer-associated death for women worldwide [1]. 1 in 8 women in the US will be diagnosed with invasive breast cancer within their lifetimes [2] and, chemotherapy is the mainstream treatment modality for breast cancer, greater than 50% of women undertaking chemotherapy will experience at least one chemotherapy-related adverse event [3]. An urgent need exists for companion therapies to improve chemotherapeutic outcome in hopes of mitigating associated adverse events and reducing treatment-related toxicities. The anticancer effects of DOX are attributed to its ability to both inhibit DNA replication in actively-proliferating cancer cells [4] and to augment the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) via disruption of redox cycling, thereby causing oxidative damage to lipids, DNA, and proteins [3]. The ensuing mitochondrial damage further accentuates DOX-related ROS production to exacerbate oxidative damage [4]

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