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Targeting heparanase overcomes chemoresistance and diminishes relapse in myeloma

In most myeloma patients, even after several rounds of intensive therapy, drug resistant tumor cells survive and proliferate aggressively leading to relapse. In the present study, gene expression profiling of tumor cells isolated from myeloma patients after sequential rounds of chemotherapy, reveale...

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Autores principales: Ramani, Vishnu C., Zhan, Fenghuang, He, Jianbo, Barbieri, Paola, Noseda, Alessandro, Tricot, Guido, Sanderson, Ralph D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4811483/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26624982
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author Ramani, Vishnu C.
Zhan, Fenghuang
He, Jianbo
Barbieri, Paola
Noseda, Alessandro
Tricot, Guido
Sanderson, Ralph D.
author_facet Ramani, Vishnu C.
Zhan, Fenghuang
He, Jianbo
Barbieri, Paola
Noseda, Alessandro
Tricot, Guido
Sanderson, Ralph D.
author_sort Ramani, Vishnu C.
collection PubMed
description In most myeloma patients, even after several rounds of intensive therapy, drug resistant tumor cells survive and proliferate aggressively leading to relapse. In the present study, gene expression profiling of tumor cells isolated from myeloma patients after sequential rounds of chemotherapy, revealed for the first time that heparanase, a potent promoter of myeloma growth and progression, was elevated in myeloma cells that survived therapy. Based on this clinical data, we hypothesized that heparanase was involved in myeloma resistance to drug therapy. In several survival and viability assays, elevated heparanase expression promoted resistance of myeloma tumor cells to chemotherapy. Mechanistically, this enhanced survival was due to heparanase-mediated ERK signaling. Importantly, use of the heparanase inhibitor Roneparstat in combination with chemotherapy clearly diminished the growth of disseminated myeloma tumors in vivo. Moreover, use of Roneparstat either during or after chemotherapy diminished regrowth of myeloma tumors in vivo following therapy. These results provide compelling evidence that heparanase is a promising, novel target for overcoming myeloma resistance to therapy and that targeting heparanase has the potential to prevent relapse in myeloma and possibly other cancers.
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spelling pubmed-48114832016-04-25 Targeting heparanase overcomes chemoresistance and diminishes relapse in myeloma Ramani, Vishnu C. Zhan, Fenghuang He, Jianbo Barbieri, Paola Noseda, Alessandro Tricot, Guido Sanderson, Ralph D. Oncotarget Research Paper In most myeloma patients, even after several rounds of intensive therapy, drug resistant tumor cells survive and proliferate aggressively leading to relapse. In the present study, gene expression profiling of tumor cells isolated from myeloma patients after sequential rounds of chemotherapy, revealed for the first time that heparanase, a potent promoter of myeloma growth and progression, was elevated in myeloma cells that survived therapy. Based on this clinical data, we hypothesized that heparanase was involved in myeloma resistance to drug therapy. In several survival and viability assays, elevated heparanase expression promoted resistance of myeloma tumor cells to chemotherapy. Mechanistically, this enhanced survival was due to heparanase-mediated ERK signaling. Importantly, use of the heparanase inhibitor Roneparstat in combination with chemotherapy clearly diminished the growth of disseminated myeloma tumors in vivo. Moreover, use of Roneparstat either during or after chemotherapy diminished regrowth of myeloma tumors in vivo following therapy. These results provide compelling evidence that heparanase is a promising, novel target for overcoming myeloma resistance to therapy and that targeting heparanase has the potential to prevent relapse in myeloma and possibly other cancers. Impact Journals LLC 2015-11-27 /pmc/articles/PMC4811483/ /pubmed/26624982 Text en Copyright: © 2016 Ramani 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 Research Paper
Ramani, Vishnu C.
Zhan, Fenghuang
He, Jianbo
Barbieri, Paola
Noseda, Alessandro
Tricot, Guido
Sanderson, Ralph D.
Targeting heparanase overcomes chemoresistance and diminishes relapse in myeloma
title Targeting heparanase overcomes chemoresistance and diminishes relapse in myeloma
title_full Targeting heparanase overcomes chemoresistance and diminishes relapse in myeloma
title_fullStr Targeting heparanase overcomes chemoresistance and diminishes relapse in myeloma
title_full_unstemmed Targeting heparanase overcomes chemoresistance and diminishes relapse in myeloma
title_short Targeting heparanase overcomes chemoresistance and diminishes relapse in myeloma
title_sort targeting heparanase overcomes chemoresistance and diminishes relapse in myeloma
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4811483/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26624982
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