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Hypoxia promotes etoposide (VP-16) resistance in neuroblastoma CHP126 cells

Authors :
Duoduo, Wang
Qionghua, Zhu
Xiayan, Zhang
Lei, Zhang
Qiaojun, He
Bo, Yang
Source :
Die Pharmazie. 65(1)
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

Hypoxia is widespread in solid tumors as a consequence of poorly structured tumor-derived neovasculature, which is recognized to play a role in the resistance of cancer cells to chemotherapy. Etoposide (VP-16), a drug commonly used in chemotherapy, leads to enhanced accumulation of cell populations in G2/M phase and increases levels of apoptosis as a topoisomerase II inhibitor. We evaluated the effects of hypoxia on the response of the neuroblastoma cell line CHP126 to VP-16, in order to delineate the mechanisms responsible for the hypoxia-induced chemoresistance of this clinically conventional anti-cancer agent, with an insight to determining potential indications in neuroblastoma therapy. In this study, physiological hypoxia was shown to attenuate G2/M arrest and apoptosis induced in CHP126 cells by VP-16. It suppressed drug-related Cdk1 activity with a less elevation of regulator proteins such as cyclin B1, Cdk7 and reduced caspase activation and PARP cleavage compared to the efficiency observed in normoxic condition, which were significantly relative with hypoxia-driven inhibition of p53 and p-ERK1/2 activation. These results clearly demonstrated that hypoxia had a protective effect against VP-16-induced cytotoxicity, which is likely to provide a further therapeutic knowledge in neuroblastomas.

Details

ISSN :
00317144
Volume :
65
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Die Pharmazie
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........824ebf98fee7df2bd49d8aa4417b9be1