Abstract

BackgroundMethotrexate is a chemotherapeutic drug that is used in therapy of a wide variety of cancers. The efficiency of treatment with this drug is compromised by the appearance of resistance. Combination treatments of MTX with other drugs that could modulate the expression of genes involved in MTX resistance would be an adequate strategy to prevent the development of this resistance.MethodsThe differential expression pattern between sensitive and MTX-resistant cells was determined by whole human genome microarrays and analyzed with the GeneSpring GX software package. A global comparison of all the studied cell lines was performed in order to find out differentially expressed genes in the majority of the MTX-resistant cells. S100A4 mRNA and protein levels were determined by RT-Real-Time PCR and Western blot, respectively. Functional validations of S100A4 were performed either by transfection of an expression vector for S100A4 or a siRNA against S100A4. Transfection of an expression vector encoding for β-catenin was used to inquire for the possible transcriptional regulation of S100A4 through the Wnt pathway.ResultsS100A4 is overexpressed in five out of the seven MTX-resistant cell lines studied. Ectopic overexpression of this gene in HT29 sensitive cells augmented both the intracellular and extracellular S100A4 protein levels and caused desensitization toward MTX. siRNA against S100A4 decreased the levels of this protein and caused a chemosensitization in combined treatments with MTX. β-catenin overexpression experiments support a possible involvement of the Wnt signaling pathway in S100A4 transcriptional regulation in HT29 cells.ConclusionsS100A4 is overexpressed in many MTX-resistant cells. S100A4 overexpression decreases the sensitivity of HT29 colon cancer human cells to MTX, whereas its knockdown causes chemosensitization toward MTX. Both approaches highlight a role for S100A4 in MTX resistance.

Highlights

  • Methotrexate is a chemotherapeutic drug that is used in therapy of a wide variety of cancers

  • Combination treatments of MTX with other drugs that could modulate the expression of genes involved in MTX resistance would be an adequate strategy to prevent the development of resistance

  • Among the genes that fulfilled this requisite, we found some genes that we had previously studied as modulators of MTX resistance, and S100 calcium binding protein A4 (S100A4), a gene overexpressed in five out of the seven cell lines studied

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Summary

Introduction

Methotrexate is a chemotherapeutic drug that is used in therapy of a wide variety of cancers. Methotrexate (MTX) is a classical drug that is used for the treatment of a wide variety of cancers, both alone and in combination with other chemotherapeutic agents [1,2]. Combination treatments of MTX with other drugs that could modulate the expression of genes involved in MTX resistance would be an adequate strategy to prevent the development of resistance. With this premise, we searched for genes differentially expressed in common among seven. We identified and validated other genes that, aside of DHFR, played an important role in MTX resistance (AKR1C1, DKK1) [4] or that indirectly contributed to the resistance phenotype (MSH3, SSBP2, ZFYVE16) [5]

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