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    Oncogene. 2008 Jul 10;27(30):4161-71. Epub 2008 Mar 17.

    P53-mediated upregulation of DcR1 impairs oxaliplatin/TRAIL-induced synergistic anti-tumour potential in colon cancer cells.

    Source

    INSERM, U865, Institut Fédératif de Recherche Lyon Est, Lyon, F-69372, France; Univ. Lyon 1, Faculté Laënnec, Lyon, F-69008, France.

    Abstract

    Oxaliplatin has emerged as a major chemotherapeutic drug in the treatment of advanced colorectal cancer, yet like most conventional cancer therapeutics, its efficacy is often compromised due to p53 mutations. Unlike oxaliplatin, tumour necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) triggers apoptosis in a p53-independent manner, and chemotherapy is known to overcome tumour resistance to TRAIL-induced cell death in most cancer cells. Using a panel of colon cancer cell lines, we assessed the ability of oxaliplatin to sensitize to TRAIL-induced apoptosis. We demonstrate that while both drugs additively or synergistically induced apoptosis in almost all cell lines tested, p53 wild-type colon cancer cells such as HCT116, LS513 or LS174T remained resistant. Impaired TRAIL-induced cell death resulted from a strong p53 dependent, oxaliplatin-mediated, DcR1 receptor expression increase. According to our finding, downregulation of DcR1 using siRNA, in p53 wild-type colon cancer cells, restored oxaliplatin/TRAIL synergistic apoptotic activity. On the contrary, exogenous DcR1 overexpression in SW480, a p53-mutated cell line, abolished the synergy between the two drugs. Altogether we demonstrate for the first time that p53 negatively regulates oxaliplatin-mediated TRAIL-induced apoptotic activity through DcR1 upregulation. Our findings could have important implications for future therapeutic strategies, and suggest that the association oxaliplatin/TRAIL should be restricted to patients harbouring a non-functional p53 protein.

    PMID:
    18345033
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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