4.7 Article

The association of statins and taxanes: an efficient combination trigger of cancer cell apoptosis

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF CANCER
Volume 106, Issue 4, Pages 685-692

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/bjc.2012.6

Keywords

statins; taxanes; gastric cancer

Categories

Funding

  1. INSERM
  2. Canceropole Grand Ouest
  3. Ligue Contre le Cancer
  4. Association of Research on Cancer (ARC)
  5. OSEO
  6. Universite de Bretagne Occidentale
  7. Faculte de Medecine Brest
  8. Region Bretagne

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BACKGROUND: Cancer cell killing might be achieved by the combined use of available drugs. Statins are major anti-hyper-cholesterolemia drugs, which also trigger apoptosis of many cancer cell types, while docetaxel is a potent microtubule-stabilising agent. METHODS: Here, we looked at the combined effects of lovastatin and docetaxel in cancer cells. RESULTS: Whole transcriptome microarrays in HGT-1 gastric cancer cells demonstrated that lovastatin strongly suppressed expression of genes involved in cell division, while docetaxel had very little transcriptional effects. Both drugs triggered apoptosis, and their combination was more than additive. A marked rise in the cell-cycle inhibitor p21, together with reduction of aurora kinases A and B, cyclins B1 and D1 proteins was induced by lovastatin alone or in combination with docetaxel. The drug treatments induced the proteolytic cleavage of procaspase-3, a drop of the anti-apoptotic Mcl-1 protein, Poly-ADP-Ribose Polymerase and Bax. Strikingly, docetaxel-resistant HGT-1 cell derivatives overexpressing the MDR-1 gene were much more sensitive to lovastatin than docetaxel-sensitive cells. CONCLUSION: These results suggest that the association of lovastatin and docetaxel, or lovastatin alone, shows promise as plausible anticancer strategies, either as a direct therapeutic approach or following acquired P-glycoprotein-dependent resistance.

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