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Predicting cisplatin and trabectedin drug sensitivity in ovarian and colon cancers
Stevens EV, Nishizuka S, Antony S, Reimers M, Varma S, Young L, Munson PJ, Weinstein JN, Kohn EC, Pommier Y.
Mol Cancer Ther. 2008 Jan;7(1):10-8.
Abstract:
Molecular profiling of markers involved in the activity of chemotherapeutic agents can shed light on the
successes and failures of treatment in patients and can also provide a basis for individualization of therapy. Toward
those ends, we have used reverse-phase protein lysate microarrays to evaluate expression of protein components of the
nucleotide excision repair (NER) pathways. Those pathways strongly influence the anticancer activities of numerous drugs,
including those that are the focus here, cisplatin and ecteinascidin 743 (Et-743; Yondelis, Trabectedin). Cisplatin is
generally more active in cell types deficient in NER, whereas Et-743 tends to be less active in those cells. We measured
protein expression and sensitivity to those drugs in 17 human ovarian and colon cancer cell lines (13 of them from the
NCI-60 panel) and five xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) patient cell types, each containing a different NER defect. Of the NER
proteins giving reliable signals, XPF and XPG showed the highest correlations of protein expression with drug activity
across all three tissue-of-origin groups. When we compared protein expression data with mRNA expression data from Affymetrix
U133A chips, we found no consistent correlation between the two across the cell lines studied, which reinforces the
conclusion that protein measurements can give more interpretable mechanistic information than can transcript measurements.
The work reported here provides motivation for larger proteomic studies with more cell types focused on potential biomarkers
in additional pharmacologically pertinent pathways.
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