Literature DB >> 33817298

Adriamycin-resistant cells are significantly less fit than adriamycin-sensitive cells in cervical cancer.

Min Qi1, Lijuan Xie2, Guihua Duan3.   

Abstract

Adriamycin (ADR) is an important chemotherapy agent in many advanced cancers, but the emergence of drug resistance during treatment is a major limitation to its successful use. Recent studies have suggested that drug-resistant cells become less fit and their growth could be inhibited by parental cells without cytotoxic treatment. In this study, we examined the fitness differences between HeLa and HeLa/ADR cells. Compared with the parental cell line, HeLa/ADR cells showed significantly lower growth rates, both in vitro and in vivo. There was no difference in the apoptosis rate between them, but G1 arrest and reduced DNA synthesis were found in HeLa/ADR cells. Further study indicated that HeLa/ADR cells failed to compete for space and nutrition against parental cells in vivo. Taken together, we demonstrate that HeLa/ADR cells are less fit and their growth can be inhibited by parental cells in the absence of ADR; therefore, the maintenance of a certain amount of ADR-sensitive cells during treatment may facilitate the control of the development of ADR resistance.
© 2021 Min Qi et al., published by De Gruyter.

Entities:  

Keywords:  adriamycin resistance; cervical cancer; fitness differences; tumor evolution

Year:  2021        PMID: 33817298      PMCID: PMC7874629          DOI: 10.1515/biol-2021-0004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Open Life Sci        ISSN: 2391-5412            Impact factor:   0.938


  24 in total

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