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Potential role of Hsp90 inhibitors in overcoming cisplatin resistance of bladder cancer‐initiating cells
Author(s) -
Tatokoro Manabu,
Koga Fumitaka,
Yoshida Soichiro,
Kawakami Satoru,
Fujii Yasuhisa,
Neckers Len,
Kihara Kazunori
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
international journal of cancer
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.475
H-Index - 234
eISSN - 1097-0215
pISSN - 0020-7136
DOI - 10.1002/ijc.26475
Subject(s) - cisplatin , cd44 , cancer research , bladder cancer , protein kinase b , cancer , cancer cell , medicine , chemotherapy , hsp90 inhibitor , cytotoxicity , mapk/erk pathway , apoptosis , heat shock protein , pharmacology , immunology , biology , hsp90 , cell , signal transduction , in vitro , microbiology and biotechnology , biochemistry , gene
Abstract For metastatic bladder cancer patients, systemic cisplatin (CDDP)‐based combination chemotherapy is the first‐line choice of treatment. Although up to 70% of advanced bladder cancer patients initially show good tumor response to this form of combination chemotherapy, over 90% of good responders relapse and eventually die of the disease. According to the cancer stem cell theory, this phenomenon is attributable to the re‐growth of bladder cancer‐initiating cells (BCICs) that have survived chemotherapy. In this study, the authors have isolated BCICs from cultured human bladder cancer cells to analyze their sensitivity to CDDP and to investigate whether heat‐shock protein 90 (Hsp90) inhibitors potentiate the cytotoxicity of CDDP on BCICs. First, the authors have confirmed that a CD44+ subpopulation of 5637 cells met the requirements to be considered tumor‐initiating cells. These BCICs were more resistant to CDDP and exhibited more activity in the Akt and ERK oncogenic signaling pathways when compared with their CD44− counterparts. The Hsp90 inhibitor 17‐(dimethylaminoethylamino)‐17‐demethoxygeldanamycin (17‐DMAG), which simultaneously inactivated both Akt and ERK signaling at noncytocidal concentrations, synergistically potentiated the cytotoxicity of CDDP against BCICs by enhancing CDDP‐induced apoptosis in vitro . The potentiating effect of 17‐DMAG was more effective than a combination of the two inhibitors specific for the Akt and ERK pathways. Finally, the authors have confirmed that, though human BCIC xenografts exhibited resistance to a single administration of CDDP and the Hsp90 inhibitor 17‐(allylamino)‐17‐demethoxygeldanamycin (17‐AAG), 17‐AAG sensitized them to CDDP in a mouse model. These data encourage clinical trials of Hsp90 inhibitors as they may improve therapeutic outcomes of CDDP‐based combination chemotherapy against advanced bladder cancer.

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