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MicroRNA-212/ABCG2-axis contributes to development of imatinib-resistance in leukemic cells

BCR-ABL-independent resistance against tyrosine kinase inhibitor is an emerging problem in therapy of chronic myeloid leukemia. Such drug resistance can be linked to dysregulation of ATP-binding cassette (ABC)-transporters leading to increased tyrosine kinase inhibitor efflux, potentially caused by...

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Autores principales: Kaehler, Meike, Ruemenapp, Johanna, Gonnermann, Daniel, Nagel, Inga, Bruhn, Oliver, Haenisch, Sierk, Ammerpohl, Ole, Wesch, Daniela, Cascorbi, Ingolf, Bruckmueller, Henrike
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5696160/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29190894
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.21272
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author Kaehler, Meike
Ruemenapp, Johanna
Gonnermann, Daniel
Nagel, Inga
Bruhn, Oliver
Haenisch, Sierk
Ammerpohl, Ole
Wesch, Daniela
Cascorbi, Ingolf
Bruckmueller, Henrike
author_facet Kaehler, Meike
Ruemenapp, Johanna
Gonnermann, Daniel
Nagel, Inga
Bruhn, Oliver
Haenisch, Sierk
Ammerpohl, Ole
Wesch, Daniela
Cascorbi, Ingolf
Bruckmueller, Henrike
author_sort Kaehler, Meike
collection PubMed
description BCR-ABL-independent resistance against tyrosine kinase inhibitor is an emerging problem in therapy of chronic myeloid leukemia. Such drug resistance can be linked to dysregulation of ATP-binding cassette (ABC)-transporters leading to increased tyrosine kinase inhibitor efflux, potentially caused by changes in microRNA expression or DNA-methylation. In an in vitro-imatinib-resistance model using K-562 cells, microRNA-212 was found to be dysregulated and inversely correlated to ABC-transporter ABCG2 expression, targeting its 3′-UTR. However, the functional impact on drug sensitivity remained unknown. Therefore, we performed transfection experiments using microRNA-mimics and –inhibitors and investigated their effect on imatinib-susceptibility in sensitive and resistant leukemic cell lines. Under imatinib-treatment, miR-212 inhibition led to enhanced cell viability (p = 0.01), reduced apoptosis (p = 0.01) and cytotoxicity (p = 0.03). These effects were limited to treatment-naïve cells and were not observed in cells, which were resistant to various imatinib-concentrations (0.1 μM to 2 μM). Further analysis in treatment-naïve cells revealed that miR-212 inhibition resulted in ABCG2 upregulation and increased ABCG2-dependent efflux. Furthermore, we observed miR-212 promoter hypermethylation in 0.5 and 2 μM IM-resistant sublines, whereas ABCG2 methylation status was not altered. Taken together, the miR-212/ABCG2-axis influences imatinib-susceptibility contributing to development of imatinib-resistance. Our data reveal new insights into mechanisms initiating imatinib-resistance in leukemic cells.
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spelling pubmed-56961602017-11-29 MicroRNA-212/ABCG2-axis contributes to development of imatinib-resistance in leukemic cells Kaehler, Meike Ruemenapp, Johanna Gonnermann, Daniel Nagel, Inga Bruhn, Oliver Haenisch, Sierk Ammerpohl, Ole Wesch, Daniela Cascorbi, Ingolf Bruckmueller, Henrike Oncotarget Research Paper BCR-ABL-independent resistance against tyrosine kinase inhibitor is an emerging problem in therapy of chronic myeloid leukemia. Such drug resistance can be linked to dysregulation of ATP-binding cassette (ABC)-transporters leading to increased tyrosine kinase inhibitor efflux, potentially caused by changes in microRNA expression or DNA-methylation. In an in vitro-imatinib-resistance model using K-562 cells, microRNA-212 was found to be dysregulated and inversely correlated to ABC-transporter ABCG2 expression, targeting its 3′-UTR. However, the functional impact on drug sensitivity remained unknown. Therefore, we performed transfection experiments using microRNA-mimics and –inhibitors and investigated their effect on imatinib-susceptibility in sensitive and resistant leukemic cell lines. Under imatinib-treatment, miR-212 inhibition led to enhanced cell viability (p = 0.01), reduced apoptosis (p = 0.01) and cytotoxicity (p = 0.03). These effects were limited to treatment-naïve cells and were not observed in cells, which were resistant to various imatinib-concentrations (0.1 μM to 2 μM). Further analysis in treatment-naïve cells revealed that miR-212 inhibition resulted in ABCG2 upregulation and increased ABCG2-dependent efflux. Furthermore, we observed miR-212 promoter hypermethylation in 0.5 and 2 μM IM-resistant sublines, whereas ABCG2 methylation status was not altered. Taken together, the miR-212/ABCG2-axis influences imatinib-susceptibility contributing to development of imatinib-resistance. Our data reveal new insights into mechanisms initiating imatinib-resistance in leukemic cells. Impact Journals LLC 2017-09-26 /pmc/articles/PMC5696160/ /pubmed/29190894 http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.21272 Text en Copyright: © 2017 Kaehler et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/) (CC-BY), which permits unrestricted use and redistribution provided that the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Kaehler, Meike
Ruemenapp, Johanna
Gonnermann, Daniel
Nagel, Inga
Bruhn, Oliver
Haenisch, Sierk
Ammerpohl, Ole
Wesch, Daniela
Cascorbi, Ingolf
Bruckmueller, Henrike
MicroRNA-212/ABCG2-axis contributes to development of imatinib-resistance in leukemic cells
title MicroRNA-212/ABCG2-axis contributes to development of imatinib-resistance in leukemic cells
title_full MicroRNA-212/ABCG2-axis contributes to development of imatinib-resistance in leukemic cells
title_fullStr MicroRNA-212/ABCG2-axis contributes to development of imatinib-resistance in leukemic cells
title_full_unstemmed MicroRNA-212/ABCG2-axis contributes to development of imatinib-resistance in leukemic cells
title_short MicroRNA-212/ABCG2-axis contributes to development of imatinib-resistance in leukemic cells
title_sort microrna-212/abcg2-axis contributes to development of imatinib-resistance in leukemic cells
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5696160/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29190894
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.21272
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