Abstract

Plasma-activated medium (PAM) has various biological activities including anticancer and antimicrobial. However, the effect on chemoresistance in cancer cells has not been clarified in detail. Solid cancer cells form a microenvironment in the body and acquire resistance against anticancer drugs. So far, we reported that claudin-2 (CLDN2), a component of tight junctions, suppresses the anticancer drug-induced cytotoxicity of spheroids that mimic in vivo tumors. Here, we found that the protein level of CLDN2 is downregulated by the sublethal concentration of PAM in human lung adenocarcinoma-derived A549 and PC-3 cells. A cycloheximide pulse-chase assay showed that PAM accelerates the degradation of CLDN2 protein. The PAM-induced reduction of CLDN2 protein was inhibited by a lysosome inhibitor, indicating PAM may enhance the lysosomal degradation of CLDN2. The paracellular permeability to doxorubicin (DXR), an anthracycline antitumor drug, was enhanced by PAM. In the spheroids, the accumulation and toxicity of DXR were enhanced by PAM. In addition, oxidative stress and the expression of nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2, one of the key factors for the acquisition of chemoresistance, were attenuated by PAM. The improvement effect of PAM on chemoresistance was suppressed by the exogenous CLDN2 overexpression. These results indicate that PAM has the ability to downregulate CLDN2 expression and may become an adjuvant drug against lung adenocarcinoma.

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