4.7 Article

MicroRNA Expression Profiles Associated with Development of Drug Resistance in Ehrlich Ascites Tumor Cells

Journal

MOLECULAR PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 8, Issue 6, Pages 2055-2062

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/mp200255d

Keywords

microRNA; microarrays; qRT-PCR; Ehrlich ascites tumor cells; drug resistance; in vitro; in vivo

Funding

  1. Copenhagen Council Research Foundation
  2. Herlev Hospital's Research Council
  3. Danish Cancer Association

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Multidrug resistance (MDR) poses a major obstacle to successful chemotherapeutic treatment of cancer, and often involves multiple genes, which may be regulated post-transcriptionally by microRNAs (miRNIAs). The purpose of the present study was therefore to identify any resistance-associated changes in miRNA expression in a sensitive and five increasingly drug-resistant Ehrlich ascites tumor (EAT) cell lines, representing different steps in the development of resistance. We used an LNA-enhanced microarray platform to study the global miRNA expression profiles in the six murine EAT cell lines, and identified growth-, hypoxia-, and resistance-specific miRNA patterns. Among the differentially expressed miRNAs, we found the two dusters miR-183 similar to miR96 similar to miR similar to 182 and miR-2001 similar to miR-200a similar to miR-429 as well as miR-141 to be consistently upregulated in the MDR cell lines, while miR-125b-5p and the two clusters miR similar to 30d similar to miR-30b and miR-23b similar to miR-27b similar to miR-24-1 were downregulated in most of the resistant EAT cells. Several of the target genes for these miRNAs-induding Zeb1/Zeb2 and members of the Fox gene family-could contribute to the drug-resistant phenotype, although we did not find that the degree of resistance was directly correlated to any specific changes in miRNA expression. Probably, the observed miRNA expression patterns reflect the underlying genomic instability of the tumor cells, and further studies are needed to explore how the highly complex regulatory miRNA networks contribute to the development of MDR.

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