Effects of gemcitabine on APE/ref-1 endonuclease activity in pancreatic cancer cells, and the therapeutic potential of antisense oligonucleotides

被引:0
作者
J P Lau
K L Weatherdon
V Skalski
D W Hedley
机构
[1] Ontario Cancer Institute/Princess Margaret Hospital,Division of Experimental Therapeutics
[2] 610 University Avenue,Department of Medical Biophysics
[3] University of Toronto,Department of Medical Oncology and Hematology
[4] 610 University Avenue,undefined
[5] Ontario Cancer Institute/Princess Margaret Hospital,undefined
[6] 610 University Avenue,undefined
来源
British Journal of Cancer | 2004年 / 91卷
关键词
base excision repair; antisense; APE/ref-1; gemcitabine; pancreatic cancer; drug resistance;
D O I
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学科分类号
摘要
Apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease (APE) is a key enzyme involved in DNA base excision repair (BER) that is often expressed at elevated levels in human cancers. Pancreatic cancer cells treated with the nucleoside analogue gemcitabine (2′, 2′-difluoro-2′deoxycytidine) showed increases in APE/redox effector factor (ref-1) protein levels (approximately two-fold for Panc-1 and six-fold for MiaPaCa-2), with corresponding increases in endonuclease activity. These results suggested that the activation of APE/ref-1 might be an adaptive response that contributes to gemcitabine resistance by facilitating BER. To test this hypothesis, we examined the effects of disrupting APE/ref-1 using antisense on gemcitabine toxicity. Antisense oligonucleotides decreased protein levels three-fold in MiaPaCa-2 and five-fold in Panc-1 in comparison to controls, associated with reduced endonuclease activity. Combination treatments with antisense oligonucleotides and gemcitabine partially suppressed the increase in APE/ref-1 activity seen in cells exposed to gemcitabine alone. While clonogenic assays showed only slight decreases in colony formation in cells treated with either antisense oligonucleotides or gemcitabine alone, the combination with APE/ref-1 antisense resulted in a 2-log enhancement of gemcitabine toxicity in Panc-1 cells. Overall these findings suggest that APE/ref-1 plays a significant role in gemcitabine resistance in some pancreatic cancer cells, and support the further investigation of novel treatments that target this protein.
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页码:1166 / 1173
页数:7
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