4.7 Article

Hypoxia induces universal but differential drug resistance and impairs anticancer mechanisms of 5-fluorouracil in hepatoma cells

Journal

ACTA PHARMACOLOGICA SINICA
Volume 38, Issue 12, Pages 1642-1654

Publisher

ACTA PHARMACOLOGICA SINICA
DOI: 10.1038/aps.2017.79

Keywords

hepatocellular carcinoma; hypoxia; 5-fluorouracil; sorafenib; drug resistance

Funding

  1. National Basic Research Program of China [2012CB932500, 2012CB932502]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81372400, 81473171, 81373446, 81321092]
  3. Chinese Academy of Sciences
  4. State Key Laboratory of Drug Research

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Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is one of the most refractory cancers. The mechanisms by which hypoxia further aggravates therapeutic responses of advanced HCC to anticancer drugs remain to be clarified. Here, we report that hypoxia (1% O2) caused 2.55-489.7-fold resistance to 6 anticancer drugs (sorafenib, 5-fluorouracil [5-FU], gemcitabine, cisplatin, adriamycin and 6-thioguanine) in 3 HCC cell lines (BEL-7402, HepG2 and SMMC-7721). Among the 6 drugs, sorafenib, the sole one approved for HCC therapy, inhibited proliferation with little influence from hypoxia and displayed the smallest variation among the 3 HCC cell lines tested. By contrast, the inhibition of proliferation by 5-FU, which has been extensively tested in clinical trials but has not been approved for HCC therapy, was severely affected by hypoxia and showed a large variation among these cell lines. In 5-FU-treated HCC cells, hypoxia reduced the levels of basal thymidylate synthase (TS) and functional TS, leading to decreased dTMP synthesis and DNA replication. Hypoxia also affected the accumulation of FdUTP and its misincorporation into DNA. Consequently, both single-strand breaks and double-strand breaks in DNA were reduced, although hypoxia also inhibited DNA repair. In 5-FU-treated HCC cells, hypoxia further abated S-phase arrest, alleviated the loss of mitochondrial membrane potential, diminished the activation of caspases, and finally resulted in reduced induction of apoptosis. Thus, hypoxia induces universal but differential drug resistance. The extensive impacts of hypoxia on the anticancer mechanisms of 5-FU contributes to its hypoxia-induced resistance in HCC cells. We propose that hypoxiainduced drug resistance and interference of hypoxia with anticancer mechanisms could be used as candidate biomarkers in selecting and/ or developing anticancer drugs for improving HCC therapy.

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