ID | 113043 |
Author |
Tomonari, Tetsu
Tokushima University
Tokushima University Educator and Researcher Directory
KAKEN Search Researchers
Tanaka, Takahiro
Tokushima University
Fujimoto, Shota
Tokushima University
Okamoto, Koichi
Tokushima University
Tokushima University Educator and Researcher Directory
KAKEN Search Researchers
Miyamoto, Hiroshi
Tokushima University
Tokushima University Educator and Researcher Directory
KAKEN Search Researchers
|
Keywords | hepatocellular carcinoma
sorafenib
resistance
transporter
MRP3
|
Content Type |
Journal Article
|
Description | The mechanism of resistance of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) to sorafenib is unknown and no useful predictive biomarker for sorafenib treatment has been reported. Accordingly, we established sorafenib-resistant HCC cells and investigated the underlying mechanism of resistance to sorafenib. Sorafenib-resistant cell lines were established from the HCC cell line PLC/PRF5 by cultivation under continuous exposure to increasing concentration of sorafenib. The IC50 values of the 2 resistant clones PLC/PRF5-R1 and PLC-PRF5-R2 were 9.2±0.47 μM (1.8-fold) and 25±5.1 μM (4.6-fold) respectively, which were significantly higher than that of parental PLC/PRF5 cells (5.4±0.17 μM) (p<0.01 respectively), as determined by MTT assay. Western blot analysis of signal transduction-related proteins showed no significant differences in expression of AKT/pAKT, mTOR/pmTOR, or ERK/pERK between the 2 resistant clones versus parent cells, suggesting no activation of an alternative signal transduction pathway. Likewise, when expression of membrane transporter proteins was determined, there were no significant differences in expression levels of BSEP, MDR1, MRP2, BCRP, MRP4 and OCT1 between resistant clones and parent cells. However, the expression levels of MRP3 in the 2 resistant clones were significantly higher than that of parent cells. When MRP3 gene was knocked down by siRNA in PLC-PRF5-R2 cells, the sensitivity of the cells to sorafenib was restored. In the analysis of gene mutation, there was no mutation in the activation segment of Raf1 kinase in the resistant clones. Our data clearly demonstrate that the efflux transporter MRP3 plays an important role in resistance to sorafenib in HCC cells.
|
Journal Title |
Oncotarget
|
ISSN | 19492553
|
Publisher | Impact Journals, LLC
|
Volume | 7
|
Issue | 6
|
Start Page | 7207
|
End Page | 7215
|
Published Date | 2016-01-12
|
Remark | This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License 3.0 (CC BY 3.0)(https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
|
EDB ID | |
DOI (Published Version) | |
URL ( Publisher's Version ) | |
FullText File | |
language |
eng
|
TextVersion |
Publisher
|
departments |
University Hospital
Medical Sciences
|