| Literature DB >> 28380403 |
Dengzhe Li1, Robert Peter Gale2, Yanfeng Liu1, Baoxia Lei1, Yuan Wang1, Dongmei Diao3, Mei Zhang4.
Abstract
Multi-drug resistance (MDR), immune suppression and decreased apoptosis are important causes of therapy-failure in leukaemia. Short interfering RNAs (siRNAs) down-regulate gene transcription, have sequence-independent immune-stimulatory effects and synergize with other anti-cancer therapies in some experimental models. We designed a siRNA targeting MDR1 with 5'-triphosphate ends (3p-siRNA-MDR1). Treatment of leukaemia cells with 3p-siRNA-MDR1 down-regulated MDR1 expression, reduced-drug resistance and induced immune and pro-apoptotic effects in drug-resistant HL-60/Adr and K562/Adr human leukaemia cell lines. We show mechanisms-of-action of these effects involve alterations in the anti-viral cytosolic retinoic acid-inducible protein-I (RIG-I; encoded by RIG-I or DDX58) mediated type-I interferon signal induction, interferon-gamma-inducible protein 10 (IP-10; encoded by IP10 or CXCL10) secretion, major histocompatibility complex-I expression (MHC-I) and caspase-mediated cell apoptosis. 3p-siRNA-MDR1 transfection also enhanced the anti-leukaemia efficacy of doxorubicin. These data suggest a possible synergistic role for 3p-siRNA-MDR1 in anti-leukaemia therapy.Entities:
Keywords: CXCL10; DDX58; MDR1; RIG-I; apoptosis; leukaemia; siRNA
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28380403 DOI: 10.1016/j.leukres.2017.03.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Leuk Res ISSN: 0145-2126 Impact factor: 3.156