Abstract

Objective Chemoresistance, due to inhibition of apoptotic response, is the major reason for the failure of anticancer therapies. HIPK2 regulates p53-apoptotic function via serine-46 (Ser46) phosphorylation and activation of p53 is a key determinant in ovarian cancer cell death. In this study we determined whether HIPK2 overexpression restored apoptotic response in chemoresistant cancer cells. Methods Using cisplatin chemosensitive (2008) and chemoresistant (2008C13) ovarian cancer cell lines we compared drug-induced activation of the HIPK2/p53Ser46 apoptotic pathway. The levels of HIPK2, Ser46 phosphorylation, and PARP cleavage were detected by Western blotting. The p53Ser46 apoptotic commitment was evaluated by luciferase assay using the Ser46 specific AIP1 target gene promoter. The apoptotic pathway was detected by caspase-3, -8, and -9 activities. Results HIPK2 was expressed differently in sensitive versus chemoresistant cells in response to different chemotherapeutic drugs (i.e., cisplatin and adriamycin), though the p53Ser46 apoptotic pathway was not defective in chemoresistant 2008C13 cells. Thus, 2008C13 cells were resistant to cisplatin but sensitive to adriamycin-induced apoptosis through activation of the HIPK2/p53Ser46 pathway. HIPK2 knock-down inhibited the adriamycin-induced apoptosis in 2008C13 cells. Exogenous HIPK2 triggered apoptosis in chemoresistant cells, associated with induction of p53Ser46-target gene AIP1. Conclusions HIPK2 is an important regulator of p53 activity in response to a chemotherapeutic drug. These results suggest that different drug-activated pathways may regulate HIPK2 and that HIPK2/p53Ser46 deregulation is involved in chemoresistance. Exogenous HIPK2 might represent a novel therapeutic approach to circumvent inhibition of apoptosis in treatment of chemoresistant ovarian cancers with wtp53.

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