| Literature DB >> 30053382 |
Olga Vera-Puente1, Carlos Rodriguez-Antolin1, Ana Salgado-Figueroa2, Patrycja Michalska3, Olga Pernia1, Brett M Reid4, RocÍo Rosas1, Alvaro Garcia-Guede1, Silvia SacristÁn2, Julia Jimenez5, Isabel Esteban-Rodriguez6, M Elena Martin2, Thomas A Sellers4, Rafael León3, VÍctor M Gonzalez2, Javier De Castro5, Inmaculada Ibanez de Caceres7.
Abstract
Adjuvant chemotherapy for solid tumors based on platinum-derived compounds such as cisplatin is the treatment of choice in most cases. Cisplatin triggers signaling pathways that lead to cell death, but it also induces changes in tumor cells that modify the therapeutic response, thereby leading to cisplatin resistance. We have recently reported that microRNA-7 is silenced by DNA methylation and is involved in the resistance to platinum in cancer cells through the action of the musculoaponeurotic fibrosarcoma oncogene family, protein G (MAFG). In the present study, we first confirm the miR-7 epigenetic regulation of MAFG in 44 normal- and/or tumor-paired samples in non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC). We also provide translational evidence of the role of MAFG and the clinical outcome in NSCLC by the interrogation of two extensive in silico databases of 2019 patients. Moreover, we propose that MAFG-mediated resistance could be conferred due to lower reactive oxygen species production after cisplatin exposure. We developed specifically selected aptamers against MAFG, with high sensitivity to detect the protein at a nuclear level probed by aptacytochemistry and histochemistry analyses. The inhibition of MAFG activity through the action of the specific aptamer apMAFG6F increased the levels of reactive oxygen species production and the sensitivity to cisplatin. We report first the specific nuclear identification of MAFG as a novel detection method for diagnosis in NSCLC, and then we report that MAFG modulates the redox response and confers cell protection against free radicals generated after platinum administration, thus also being a promising therapeutic target.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30053382 DOI: 10.1016/j.trsl.2018.06.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Res ISSN: 1878-1810 Impact factor: 7.012