| Literature DB >> 30783141 |
Khine Myint1, Riya Biswas2, Yan Li2,3, Nancy Jong1, Stephen Jamieson1,4, Johnson Liu5, Catherine Han1,4, Christopher Squire6, Fabrice Merien2, Jun Lu2,3, Takeo Nakanishi7, Ikumi Tamai7, Mark McKeage8,9.
Abstract
Oxaliplatin is important for the clinical treatment of colorectal cancer and other gastrointestinal malignancies, but tumour resistance is limiting. Several oxaliplatin transporters were previously identified but their relative contributions to determining oxaliplatin tumour responses and gastrointestinal tumour cell sensitivity to oxaliplatin remains unclear. We studied clinical associations between tumour expression of oxaliplatin transporter candidate genes and patient response to oxaliplatin, then experimentally verified associations found with MRP2 in models of human gastrointestinal cancer. Among 18 oxaliplatin transporter candidate genes, MRP2 was the only one to be differentially expressed in the tumours of colorectal cancer patients who did or did not respond to FOLFOX chemotherapy. Over-expression of MRP2 (endogenously in HepG2 and PANC-1 cells, or induced by stable transfection of HEK293 cells) decreased oxaliplatin accumulation and cytotoxicity but those deficits were reversed by inhibition of MRP2 with myricetin or siRNA knockdown. Mice bearing subcutaneous HepG2 tumour xenografts were sensitised to oxaliplatin antitumour activity by concurrent myricetin treatment with little or no increase in toxicity. In conclusion, MRP2 limits oxaliplatin accumulation and response in human gastrointestinal cancer. Screening tumour MRP2 expression levels, to select patients for treatment with oxaliplatin-based chemotherapy alone or in combination with a MRP2 inhibitor, could improve treatment outcomes.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30783141 PMCID: PMC6381153 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-38667-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Oxaliplatin transporter candidate genes. Adapted and updated from[16]. References are the original reports of oxaliplatin transport by each transporter.
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Figure 1Differential expression of oxaliplatin transporter candidate genes in colorectal tumours of patients who responded or did not respond to FOLFOX chemotherapy. Data from the Tsuji Colorectal dataset[29] from Oncomine included 83 colorectal cancer patients who had tumour microarray gene expression analysis prior to FOLFOX chemotherapy then stratification by tumour response. Bars and error bars are means and standard errors of differences in the expression of individual oxaliplatin transporter candidate genes between responding and non-responding patients. Positive differences indicate higher expression in non-responders whereas negative differences indicate higher expression in responders. The asterisk is a P value (***P < 0.0001) from a Bonferroni post-test that followed a Two-way ANOVA (Two-way ANOVA Factors: Tumour response, P = 0.0025; Gene, P < 0.0001; Interaction, P = 0014). ABCC2/MRP2 was over-expressed in colorectal tumours from patients who did not respond to FOLFOX chemotherapy compared to responders. Other oxaliplatin transporter candidate genes were expressed similarly in both responding and non-responding patients.
Figure 2Oxaliplatin accumulation and cytotoxicity in HEK293 cells stably transfected to overexpress MRP2 (HEK-MRP2 cells) compared to control cells (HEK-P cells). (A) MRP2 was localised to the plasma membranes of HEK-MRP2 cells as demonstrated by MRP2-immunofluorescence confocal microscopy. Red staining, MRP2; Blue staining, DAPI. (B) Representative inhibition of growth of HEK-MRP2 and HEK-P cells after 2-hour exposure to oxaliplatin. Symbols are means and standard errors of the mean [n = 4]. Solid lines are non-linear regression fits (Y = Bottom + (Top − Bottom)/(1 + 10((LogIC50 − X)*HillSlope))) to the data (r2 > 0.97). (C) Time-course of platinum accumulation during exposure to oxaliplatin for up to two hours showing lower accumulation of platinum in HEK-MRP2 cells. Asterisks are P values (***P < 0.001; ****P < 0.0001) for differences at each time point from Bonferroni post-tests that followed a Two-way ANOVA [n = 6]. (D) Kinetics of platinum accumulation during exposure to oxaliplatin for up to two hours showing a plateau in levels after one-hour exposure. Solid lines represent non-linear regression fits (y = ymax(1− e−kx) to the data (r2 > 0.92). (E,F) Effect of myricetin (60 μM) on oxaliplatin accumulation [n = 3] (E) and cytotoxicity [n = 3–4] (F). Asterisks are P values (***P < 0.001; ****P < 0.0001) for differences with each of the other three groups from Bonferroni post-tests that followed a Two-way ANOVA. Bars represent means and standard errors of the mean. HEK-MRP2 cells accumulated less platinum and were less sensitive to oxaliplatin-induced growth inhibition than control HEK-P cells. Myricetin increased the accumulation and cytotoxicity of oxaliplatin in HEK-MRP2 cells but not in HEK-P cells.
Figure 3Identification of human gastrointestinal tumour lines with MRP2-mediated deficits in oxaliplatin accumulation. (A) Platinum accumulation after exposure to oxaliplatin (50 μM) for 2 h showing lower platinum accumulation in HepG2 and PANC-1 cells (open bars) compared to other tumour lines (closed bars) [n = 4]. (B) CDCF accumulation in HEK-P, HEK-MRP2 and HepG2 cells. Asterisks are P values (*P < 0.05; **P < 0.01) from Bonferroni post-tests that followed One-way ANOVA for comparisons to HEK-P cells [n = 3]; (C) Differential expression of oxaliplatin transporter candidate genes between tumour lines with high (6 cell lines) versus low (3 cell lines) oxaliplatin accumulation (closed versus open bars from panel (A)) determined by transporter real-time PCR array analysis. Positive differences indicate higher expression in lines with lower oxaliplatin accumulation whereas negative differences indicate higher expression in lines with higher oxaliplatin accumulation. Asterisks are P values (*P < 0.05; **P < 0.01) from Bonferroni post-tests that followed Two-way ANOVA (Two-way ANOVA factors: Gene P < 0.0001; Platinum accumulation low versus high, NS; Interaction, NS) [n = 3 replicates per cell line]. (D,E) Effect of myricetin (60 μM) on the accumulation (D) [n = 4–5] and cytotoxicity (E) [n = 3] of oxaliplatin in HepG2 and PANC1 cells. Asterisks are P values (**P < 0.01; ***P < 0.001; ****P < 0.0001) from Bonferroni post-tests that followed Two-way ANOVA. HepG2 and PANC-2 cells accumulated less oxaliplatin compared to other GI tumour lines. Inhibition of MRP2 by myricetin increased the accumulation and cytotoxicity of oxaliplatin in HepG2 and PANC-1 cells. Bars are the means and standard errors of the mean.
Figure 4Effect of ABCC2 siRNA gene knockdown on MRP2 mRNA expression (A), CDCF accumulation (B), oxaliplatin accumulation (C) and oxaliplatin-induced growth inhibition (D) in HepG2 cells. Asterisks are P values (*P < 0.05; **P < 0.01; **P < 0.001) from Bonferroni post-tests that followed one-way ANOVA. Inhibition of MRP2 by siRNA gene knockdown increased the accumulation and cytotoxicity of oxaliplatin in HepG2 cells. Bars are the means and standard errors of the mean (n = 3).
Figure 5In vivo sensitisation to oxaliplatin antitumour activity by inhibition of MRP2 with myricetin. Nude mice (NIH-III) were implanted subcutaneously with HepG2 cells, which showed MRP2-mediated deficits in oxaliplatin accumulation in vitro. Tumour bearing mice (8 per group) were then treated with oxaliplatin (3 mg/kg ip), myricetin (25 mg/kg iv) or matching drug vehicle, alone or in combination once weekly for five weeks starting when tumours measured approximately 200 mm3. Arrowheads are the time of treatment. Experimental endpoints measured during and after treatment included body weight (A), tumour volume (B), time for tumours to quadruple in volume from baseline (C), and time to euthanasia from the start of treatment (D). Asterisks shown in panel B are P values (***P < 0.002; ****P < 0.0001) for differences between the oxaliplatin alone and oxaliplatin plus myricetin treatment groups at each time point from Bonferroni post-tests that followed Two-way Repeated Measures ANOVA. P values shown in panels C and D are for comparisons of all treatment groups. Oxaliplatin reduced body weight but had no antitumour activity when given alone. When combined with myricetin, oxaliplatin slowed tumour growth and extended the survival of animals with little or no increase in toxicity.