4.7 Article

Potential Association of Cytochrome P450 Copy Number Alteration in Tumour with Chemotherapy Resistance in Lung Adenocarcinoma Patients

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms241713380

Keywords

copy number alteration; lung adenocarcinoma; paclitaxel-metabolizing capacity; resistance to anticancer therapy

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Resistance to anticancer agents is a major problem in tumor therapy, and genetic polymorphisms and copy number alterations of drug-metabolizing enzymes contribute to the development of resistance. A high-throughput qPCR-based method was used to detect CYP copy number alterations in tumors, and the altered copy numbers of specific CYP genes were associated with non-responder patients. This method could be an alternative to next-generation sequencing and provide a potential biomarker for therapy-resistant tumors.
Resistance to anticancer agents is a major obstacle to efficacious tumour therapy and responsible for high cancer-related mortality rates. Some resistance mechanisms are associated with pharmacokinetic variability in anticancer drug exposure due to genetic polymorphisms of drug-metabolizing cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzymes, whereas variations in tumoural metabolism as a consequence of CYP copy number alterations are assumed to contribute to the selection of resistant cells. A high-throughput quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR)-based method was developed for detection of CYP copy number alterations in tumours, and a scoring system improved the identification of inappropriate reference genes that underwent deletion/multiplication in tumours. The copy numbers of both the target (CYP2C8, CYP3A4) and the reference genes (ALB, B2M, BCKDHA, F5, CD36, MPO, TBP, RPPH1) established in primary lung adenocarcinoma by the qPCR-based method were congruent with those determined by next-generation sequencing (for 10 genes, slope = 0.9498, r2 = 0.72). In treatment naive adenocarcinoma samples, the copy number multiplication of paclitaxel-metabolizing CYP2C8 and/or CYP3A4 was more prevalent in non-responder patients with progressive disease/exit than in responders with complete remission. The high-throughput qPCR-based method can become an alternative approach to next-generation sequencing in routine clinical practice, and identification of altered CYP copy numbers may provide a promising biomarker for therapy-resistant tumours.

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