News Release

Sensitivity to diverse range of chemotherapeutic drugs linked to common pathway

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Cell Press

Using a functional genomic screen, scientists have defined elements that impact the responsiveness of cancer cells to drugs commonly used as anticancer therapeutics. The research, published in the June issue of the journal Cancer Cell, published by Cell Press, identifies individual genes that are associated with resistance to chemotherapeutic drugs and sets the stage for future studies that may significantly enhance the ability to predict whether or not a particular tumor will respond to treatment.

Resistance to chemotherapeutic drugs is the primary cause of treatment failure in patients with metastatic cancer. Dr. Julian Downward from the Cancer Research UK London Research Institute and colleagues used RNA interference to directly examine the contribution of over 800 candidate proteins to the sensitivity or resistance of cancer cells to several drugs that are commonly used to treat cancer.

Using this technique, the researchers found that resistance to the chemotherapeutic agent paclitaxel, a member of the taxane family, as expected, involves genes that impair drug-induced mitotic arrest following knockdown. Silencing of these genes in many cases also induces polyploidy and multinucleation in the absence of drug treatment. The researchers conclude that specific disruption of the mitotic checkpoint promotes paclitaxel resistance and that chromosomal numerical heterogeneity may be a useful predictor of paclitaxel resistance in some cancers.

Ceramide metabolism was identified as a critical regulator of sensitivity to a wide range of chemotherapeutic drugs. Although ceramide has been associated with apoptosis for some time, the mechanisms have not been well understood. In this study, decreased expression of a ceramide transport protein, COL4A3BP, sensitized cancer cells to multiple cytotoxic agents. Further, expression of COL4A3BP was increased in drug-resistant tumor cells and in a small cohort of ovarian cancers following paclitaxel treatment.

The researchers suggest that paclitaxel-induced prolonged mitotic arrest may result in ceramide accumulation and initiation of apoptosis, while inhibition of this arrest, characterized by polyploidy, may suppress ceramide generation and promote cell survival. “These data suggest that the taxane class of drugs may lack efficacy in tumors with high levels of chromosomal instability characterized by chromosomal numerical heterogeneity and provide a rational basis for identification of patients likely to benefit from these drugs,” explains Dr. Downward.

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The researchers include Charles Swanton, Michela Marani, Olivier Pardo, Patricia H. Warne, Gavin Kelly, Erik Sahai, Julian Downward and Barbara Nicke of Cancer Research UK London Research Institute in London, UK; Frédéric Elustondo of University College London in London, UK; Jenny Chang of Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, TX; Jillian Temple, Ahmed A. Ahmed, and James D. Brenton of Cambridge Research Institute in Cambridge, UK. This work was funded by Cancer Research UK.

Haldar et al.: “A Conditional Mouse Model of Synovial Sarcoma: Insights into a Myogenic Origin.” Publishing in Cancer Cell 11, 498–512, June 2007 http://www.cancercell.org


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