Highly Synergistic Effect
of Sequential Treatment with Epigenetic and Anticancer Drugs To Overcome
Drug Resistance in Breast Cancer Cells Is Mediated via Activation
of <i>p21</i> Gene Expression Leading to G2/M Cycle Arrest
- Publication date
- Publisher
Abstract
Epigenetic alterations such as aberrant DNA methylation
and histone modifications contribute substantially to both the cause
and maintenance of drug resistance. These epigenetic changes lead
to silencing of tumor suppressor genes involved in key DNA damage-response
pathways, making drug-resistant cancer cells nonresponsive to conventional
anticancer drug therapies. Our hypothesis is that treating drug-resistant
cells with epigenetic drugs could restore the sensitivity to anticancer
drugs by reactivating previously silenced genes. To test our hypothesis,
we used drug-resistant breast cancer cells (MCF-7/ADR) and two epigenetic
drugs that act via different mechanisms5-aza-2′-deoxycytidine
(decitabine, DAC), a demethylating agent, and suberoylanilide hydroxamic
acid (SAHA), a histone deacetylase inhibitorin combination
with doxorubicin. We show that the sequential treatment of resistant
cells, first with an epigenetic drug (DAC), and then with doxorubicin,
induces a highly synergistic effect, thus reducing the IC<sub>50</sub> of doxorubicin by several thousand fold. The sequential treatment
caused over 90% resistant cells to undergo G2/M cell cycle arrest,
determined to be due to upregulation of <i>p21</i><sup><i>WAF1/CIP1</i></sup> expression, which is responsible for cell-cycle
regulation. The induction of <i>p21</i><sup><i>WAF1/CIP1</i></sup> correlated well with the depletion of DNA methyltransferase1
(DNMT1), an enzyme that promotes methylation of DNA, suggesting that
the <i>p21</i><sup><i>WAF1/CIP1</i></sup> gene
may have been methylated and hence is inactive in MCF-7/ADR cells.
Microarray analysis shows expression of several tumor suppressor genes
and downregulation of tumor promoter genes, particularly in sequentially
treated resistant cells. Sequential treatment was found to be significantly
more effective than simultaneous treatment, and DAC was more effective
than SAHA in overcoming doxorubicin resistance. Synergistic effect
with sequential treatment was also seen in drug-sensitive breast cancer
cells, but the effect was significantly more pronounced in resistant
cells. In conclusion, the sequential treatment of an epigenetic drug
in combination with doxorubicin induces a highly synergistic effect
that overcomes doxorubicin resistance in breast cancer cells