Literature DB >> 16671091

Methotrexate resistance in vitro is achieved by a dynamic selectionprocess of tumor cell variants emerging during treatment.

Josep M de Anta1, Clara Mayo, Francesc Solé, Marta Salido, Blanca Espinet, Cristina Corzo, Myriam Petzold, Olaya Villa, Sergi Serrano, Francisco X Real, Xavier Mayol.   

Abstract

Genetic instability leads to tumor heterogeneity, which in turn provides a source of cell variants responsible for drug resistance. However, the source of resistant cells during the process of acquired resistance is poorly understood. Our aim has been to characterize the mechanism by which acquired resistance to methotrexate emerges during the course of cancer cell treatment in vitro. We recently demonstrated that, in vitro, HT-29 colon cancer cells become transiently sensitive to methotrexate by depleting the extracellular milieu of survival factors; on the other hand, the cell population under treatment can reversibly adapt to grow below a critical cell density in the presence of the drug. Here, we show that this adapted cell population gives rise to permanent resistant populations through repeated cycles of cell death and growth. This increased cell turnover, but not merely cell proliferation, is required for the appearance of increasing degrees of stable resistance that are progressively selected by drug pressure. Such a process, taking place in multiple steps, is here designated "dynamic selection." The analysis of sensitive and resistant HT-29 cell populations revealed that methotrexate induces genomic instability--characterized by centrosome amplification and aberrant chromosome recombination--leading to a low-level amplification of the 5q chromosome arm as one of the earliest genetic events selected during treatment. Therefore, this model provides a mechanism by which a tumor cell population lacking resistant subpopulations before treatment is able to acquire the genetic changes required for stable drug resistance. Copyright 2006 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16671091     DOI: 10.1002/ijc.22028

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Cancer        ISSN: 0020-7136            Impact factor:   7.396


  1 in total

1.  A negative genetic interaction map in isogenic cancer cell lines reveals cancer cell vulnerabilities.

Authors:  Franco J Vizeacoumar; Roland Arnold; Frederick S Vizeacoumar; Megha Chandrashekhar; Alla Buzina; Jordan T F Young; Julian H M Kwan; Azin Sayad; Patricia Mero; Steffen Lawo; Hiromasa Tanaka; Kevin R Brown; Anastasia Baryshnikova; Anthony B Mak; Yaroslav Fedyshyn; Yadong Wang; Glauber C Brito; Dahlia Kasimer; Taras Makhnevych; Troy Ketela; Alessandro Datti; Mohan Babu; Andrew Emili; Laurence Pelletier; Jeff Wrana; Zev Wainberg; Philip M Kim; Robert Rottapel; Catherine A O'Brien; Brenda Andrews; Charles Boone; Jason Moffat
Journal:  Mol Syst Biol       Date:  2013-10-08       Impact factor: 11.429

  1 in total

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