4.6 Article

ERCC1 Overexpression Increases Radioresistance in Colorectal Cancer Cells

Journal

CANCERS
Volume 14, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cancers14194798

Keywords

preoperative concurrent chemoradiotherapy; ERCC1; radiation resistance; HCT116-Tet-on; COLO205-Tet-on

Categories

Funding

  1. Kaohsiung Medical University [KMU-DK(B)110005, KMU-S110002, KMU-TC111A03-2, KMU-110KK004, KMU-M111011]
  2. Kaohsiung Medical University Hospital [KMUH-DK(B)110005-1, KMUH108-8R66, KMUH109-9R78, KMUH110-0R72]
  3. National Sun Yat sen University [NK110I02-2]
  4. Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan [MOST103-2314-B-037-010-MY3, MOST108-2314-B-037-021-MY3, MOST110-2320-B-037-027-MY3, MOST110-2314-B-037-075-MY2]
  5. National Kaohsiung University of Science and Technology [110E9010BA11]

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This study investigated the functionality and stability of ERCC1 using the Tet-on gene expression system. The results showed that overexpression of ERCC1 increased radioresistance in colorectal cancer cells and was highly correlated with radiotherapeutic efficiency. Furthermore, ERCC1 overexpression also promoted cell migration under radiation exposure. Additional experiments confirmed the increased cancer radiation resistance associated with ERCC1 overexpression. Therefore, ERCC1 overexpression may serve as a prognostic marker for colorectal cancer patients undergoing concurrent chemoradiotherapy.
Simple Summary The 20-30% of locally advanced rectal cancer patients undergoing preoperative concurrent chemoradiotherapy had no expected efficacy, and ERCC1 overexpression was found in these tumor tissue patients. In the interest of confirming and adding details to our understanding of that correlation, The Tet-on gene expression system was used to examine ERCC1 functionality and stability. Our data from regulatable HCT116-Tet-on and COLO205-Tet-on cell lines verified the increased radioresistance in colorectal cancer cells that are associated with ERCC1 overexpression, and they confirmed a high correlation between ERCC1 levels and radiotherapeutic efficiency. Furthermore, overexpression of ERCC1 also increases cell migration under radiation exposure. Additional data from ERCC1 expression regulation in vivo confirmed that the overexpression of increased cancer radiation resistance suggests that ERCC1 expression plays a key role. Preoperative concurrent chemoradiotherapy (CCRT) is a standard treatment for locally advanced rectal cancer patients, but 20-30% do not benefit from the desired therapeutic effects. Previous reports indicate that high levels of ERCC1 reduce the effectiveness of cisplatin-based CCRT; however, it remains unclear as to whether ERCC1 overexpression increases radiation resistance. To clarify the correlation between ERCC1 levels and radiation (RT) resistance, we established two cell lines (HCT116-Tet-on and COLO205-Tet-on), induced them to overexpress ERCC1, detected cell survival following exposure to radiation, established HCT116-Tet-on and COLO205-Tet-on heterotopic cancer animal models, and detected tumor volume following exposure to radiation. We found that ERCC1 overexpression increased radiation resistance. After regulating ERCC1 levels and radiation exposure to verify the correlation, we noted that increased radiation resistance was dependent on ERCC1 upregulation in both cell lines. For further verification, we exposed HCT116-Tet-on and COLO205-Tet-on heterotopic cancer animal models to radiation and observed that ERCC1 overexpression increased colorectal cancer tumor radioresistance in both. Combined, our results suggest that ERCC1 overexpression may serve as a suitable CCRT prognostic marker for colorectal cancer patients.

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