4.7 Article

Transcriptome Sequencing Reveals the Mechanism behind Chemically Induced Oral Mucositis in a 3D Cell Culture Model

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms24055058

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oral mucositis; everolimus; mTOR; inhibitor; 3D cell culture model; cornification; glycolysis; sterol biosynthetic process; proinflammatory; transcriptomics; molecular signatures; anticancer agents

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Oral mucositis is a common side effect of cancer treatment, especially with the mTORC1 inhibitor everolimus. Current treatment methods are not effective enough, so a better understanding of the causes and mechanisms behind oral mucositis is needed to find potential therapeutic targets.
Oral mucositis is a common side effect of cancer treatment, and in particular of treatment with the mTORC1 inhibitor everolimus. Current treatment methods are not efficient enough and a better understanding of the causes and mechanisms behind oral mucositis is necessary to find potential therapeutic targets. Here, we treated an organotypic 3D oral mucosal tissue model consisting of human keratinocytes grown on top of human fibroblasts with a high or low dose of everolimus for 40 or 60 h and investigated (1) the effect of everolimus on microscopic sections of the 3D cell culture for evidence of morphologic changes and (2) changes in the transcriptome by high throughput RNA-Seq analysis. We show that the most affected pathways are cornification, cytokine expression, glycolysis, and cell proliferation and we provide further details. This study provides a good resource towards a better understanding of the development of oral mucositis. It gives a detailed overview of the different molecular pathways that are involved in mucositis. This in turn provides information about potential therapeutic targets, which is an important step towards preventing or managing this common side effect of cancer treatment.

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