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Drug metabolism and clearance system in tumor cells of patients with multiple myeloma

Resistance to chemotherapy is a major limitation of cancer treatments with several molecular mechanisms involved, in particular altered local drug metabolism and detoxification process. The role of drug metabolism and clearance system has not been satisfactorily investigated in Multiple Myeloma (MM)...

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Autores principales: Hassen, Wafa, Kassambara, Alboukadel, Reme, Thierry, Sahota, Surinder, Seckinger, Anja, Vincent, Laure, Cartron, Guillaume, Moreaux, Jérôme, Hose, Dirk, Klein, Bernard
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4467447/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25669983
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author Hassen, Wafa
Kassambara, Alboukadel
Reme, Thierry
Sahota, Surinder
Seckinger, Anja
Vincent, Laure
Cartron, Guillaume
Moreaux, Jérôme
Hose, Dirk
Klein, Bernard
author_facet Hassen, Wafa
Kassambara, Alboukadel
Reme, Thierry
Sahota, Surinder
Seckinger, Anja
Vincent, Laure
Cartron, Guillaume
Moreaux, Jérôme
Hose, Dirk
Klein, Bernard
author_sort Hassen, Wafa
collection PubMed
description Resistance to chemotherapy is a major limitation of cancer treatments with several molecular mechanisms involved, in particular altered local drug metabolism and detoxification process. The role of drug metabolism and clearance system has not been satisfactorily investigated in Multiple Myeloma (MM), a malignant plasma cell cancer for which a majority of patients escapes treatment. The expression of 350 genes encoding for uptake carriers, xenobiotic receptors, phase I and II Drug Metabolizing Enzymes (DMEs) and efflux transporters was interrogated in MM cells (MMCs) of newly-diagnosed patients in relation to their event free survival. MMCs of patients with a favourable outcome have an increased expression of genes coding for xenobiotic receptors (RXRα, LXR, CAR and FXR) and accordingly of their gene targets, influx transporters and phase I/II DMEs. On the contrary, MMCs of patients with unfavourable outcome displayed a global down regulation of genes coding for xenobiotic receptors and the downstream detoxification genes but had a high expression of genes coding for ARNT and Nrf2 pathways and ABC transporters. Altogether, these data suggests ARNT and Nrf2 pathways could be involved in MM primary resistance and that targeting RXRα, PXR, LXR and FXR through agonists could open new perspectives to alleviate or reverse MM drug resistance.
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spelling pubmed-44674472015-06-22 Drug metabolism and clearance system in tumor cells of patients with multiple myeloma Hassen, Wafa Kassambara, Alboukadel Reme, Thierry Sahota, Surinder Seckinger, Anja Vincent, Laure Cartron, Guillaume Moreaux, Jérôme Hose, Dirk Klein, Bernard Oncotarget Clinical Research Paper Resistance to chemotherapy is a major limitation of cancer treatments with several molecular mechanisms involved, in particular altered local drug metabolism and detoxification process. The role of drug metabolism and clearance system has not been satisfactorily investigated in Multiple Myeloma (MM), a malignant plasma cell cancer for which a majority of patients escapes treatment. The expression of 350 genes encoding for uptake carriers, xenobiotic receptors, phase I and II Drug Metabolizing Enzymes (DMEs) and efflux transporters was interrogated in MM cells (MMCs) of newly-diagnosed patients in relation to their event free survival. MMCs of patients with a favourable outcome have an increased expression of genes coding for xenobiotic receptors (RXRα, LXR, CAR and FXR) and accordingly of their gene targets, influx transporters and phase I/II DMEs. On the contrary, MMCs of patients with unfavourable outcome displayed a global down regulation of genes coding for xenobiotic receptors and the downstream detoxification genes but had a high expression of genes coding for ARNT and Nrf2 pathways and ABC transporters. Altogether, these data suggests ARNT and Nrf2 pathways could be involved in MM primary resistance and that targeting RXRα, PXR, LXR and FXR through agonists could open new perspectives to alleviate or reverse MM drug resistance. Impact Journals LLC 2014-12-26 /pmc/articles/PMC4467447/ /pubmed/25669983 Text en Copyright: © 2015 Hassen et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Clinical Research Paper
Hassen, Wafa
Kassambara, Alboukadel
Reme, Thierry
Sahota, Surinder
Seckinger, Anja
Vincent, Laure
Cartron, Guillaume
Moreaux, Jérôme
Hose, Dirk
Klein, Bernard
Drug metabolism and clearance system in tumor cells of patients with multiple myeloma
title Drug metabolism and clearance system in tumor cells of patients with multiple myeloma
title_full Drug metabolism and clearance system in tumor cells of patients with multiple myeloma
title_fullStr Drug metabolism and clearance system in tumor cells of patients with multiple myeloma
title_full_unstemmed Drug metabolism and clearance system in tumor cells of patients with multiple myeloma
title_short Drug metabolism and clearance system in tumor cells of patients with multiple myeloma
title_sort drug metabolism and clearance system in tumor cells of patients with multiple myeloma
topic Clinical Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4467447/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25669983
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