AI Article Synopsis

  • Doxorubicin's effectiveness against soft tissue sarcomas (STS) is limited by toxicity and the development of multidrug resistance, primarily due to high levels of efflux pumps like P-glycoprotein.
  • Nilotinib was found to be more effective than imatinib, inhibiting tumor growth significantly and enhancing the effects of doxorubicin by at least two-fold, leading to a sustained reduction in cell number even after treatment cessation.
  • On a molecular level, nilotinib inhibits activation of key signaling pathways and reduces the expression of efflux pumps, improving doxorubicin retention in cancer cells and showing promise for enhanced clinical treatments in STS.

Article Abstract

The therapeutic effect of doxorubicin (DXR) in the treatment of soft tissue sarcomas (STS) is limited by its toxicity and the development of multidrug resistance (MDR), the latter mainly induced by high expression of efflux pumps (e.g., P-glycoprotein [P-gp]). Therefore, the search for alternative therapies, which sensitize these tumors to chemotherapy while maintaining a low toxicity profile, is a rational approach. We assessed efficacy and molecular mechanisms involved in the antiproliferative effects of the tyrosine kinase inhibitors, nilotinib and imatinib, as single agents or in combination with DXR, in human synovial sarcoma SW982 and leiomyosarcoma SK-UT-1 cells. As single compound nilotinib (1-10 µM) was more potent than imatinib inhibiting the growth of SK-UT-1 and SW982 cells by 33.5-59.6%, respectively. Importantly, only nilotinib synergized the antitumoral effect of DXR (0.05-0.5 µM) by at least 2-fold, which clearly surpassed the mere sum of effects according to isobolographic analysis. Moreover, nilotinib in combination with DXR had a sustained effect on cell number (-70.3±5.8%) even 12 days after withdrawal of drugs compared to DXR alone. On the molecular level, only nilotinib fully blocked FBS-induced ERK1 and p38 MAPK activation, hence, reducing basal and DXR-induced up-regulation of P-gp levels. Moreover, efflux activity of the MDR-related proteins P-gp and MRP-1 was inhibited, altogether resulting in intracellular DXR retention. In high-risk STS tumors 53.8% and 15.4% were positive for P-gp and MRP-1 expression, respectively, with high incidence of P-gp in synovial sarcoma (72.7%). In summary, nilotinib exhibits antiproliferative effects on cellular models of STS and sensitizes them to DXR by reverting DXR-induced P-gp-mediated MDR and inhibiting MRP-1 activity, leading to a synergistic effect with potential for clinical treatment.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3360613PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0037735PLOS

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