Abstract

BackgroundMany patients diagnosed with ovarian cancer experience recurrence and metastasis, two aspects that will often cause their demise. Epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) is a key process involved in cancer progression. With increasing evidence linking Cisplatin and EMT, we wanted to identify a compound able to counter EMT progression when cancer cells are treated with Cisplatin.Methodology/Principal FindingsCell death was evaluated by cytometry with Annexin V/PI staining in A2780 and A2780CP cells. Ovarian cancer cell lines were treated with Cisplatin (24 h, 10 µM) and different concentrations of Resveratrol to evaluate its effect on Cisplatin-induced EMT using Western Blot and RT-PCR analysis. Morphological studies and wound healing assay to evaluate cell motility were performed using 72 h Cisplatin treatment with A2780 and A2780CP cells. Densitometry was done on Western Blot and PCR results, and statistical significance was determined using One-Way ANOVA followed by Tukey post-hoc test. Our results show that Cisplatin induced EMT-associated morphological changes in the A2780 ovarian cancer cell line and to a lesser extent in its Cisplatin-resistant counterpart A2780CP. Resveratrol caused cell death in A2780 and A2780CP cell lines in an apoptotic-independent manner. Resveratrol inhibited Cisplatin-induced Snail expression by reducing the Erk pathway activation, reverted morphological changes induced by Cisplatin and decreased cell migration.ConclusionsThese results indicate that Resveratrol has interesting potential to prevent Cisplatin-induced EMT in ovarian cancer cells. By increasing cell death, it also represents an inviting approach as adjuvant therapy to be used with chemotherapy. Using Erk pathway inhibitors could also prove helpful in ovarian cancer treatment to reduce the risk of metastasis.

Highlights

  • Ovarian cancer is the seventh most common cancer and the third most common amongst gynaecological cancers in canadian women

  • These results indicate that Resveratrol has interesting potential to prevent Cisplatin-induced Epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) in ovarian cancer cells

  • It represents an inviting approach as adjuvant therapy to be used with chemotherapy

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Summary

Introduction

Ovarian cancer is the seventh most common cancer and the third most common amongst gynaecological cancers in canadian women. Ovarian cancer is the gynaecological cancer with the highest mortality rate and a 5-year survival rate estimated to only 15–25% [1]. This can be explained by the fact that patients affected by ovarian cancer often already have a high-stage disease at the moment of diagnosis [2,3]. EMT is a phenomenon during which cells will undergo a transition from an epithelial phenotype to a more motile and invasive mesenchymal phenotype, rendering them able to invade tissues and form metastases. Epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) is a key process involved in cancer progression. With increasing evidence linking Cisplatin and EMT, we wanted to identify a compound able to counter EMT progression when cancer cells are treated with Cisplatin

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