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Chemotherapy 2004-Jun

Hypoxia-inducible factor 1alpha- mediated resistance to phenolic anticancer.

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Ju-Yeon Hyun
Yang-Sook Chun
Tae-You Kim
Hye-Lim Kim
Myung-Suk Kim
Jong-Wan Park

Keywords

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Phenolic compounds EGCG [(-)-epigallocatechin-3-gallate], resveratrol (3,4',5-trihydroxy-trans-stilbene) and capsaicin (trans-8-methyl-N-vanillyl-6-nonenamide) are worth investigating for clinical application in cancer prevention and chemotherapy. Hypoxia-induced drug resistance is a major obstacle in the development of effective cancer chemotherapy. Therefore, we examined whether drug resistance to these phenolic compounds is acquired by hypoxia.

METHODS

Hep3B hepatoma, Caki-1 renal carcinoma, SK-N-MC neuroblastoma, and HEK293 cell lines were cultured under normoxic or hypoxic conditions. Drug sensitivities to the phenolic compounds and expression of hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha (HIF-1alpha) and the multidrug resistance genes were examined in these cell lines.

RESULTS

Drug resistance was acquired 24 h after hypoxia and subsided 8 h after reoxygenation. Protein synthesis inhibitors abolished this drug resistance. A transfection study demonstrated that HIF-1alpha enhanced this hypoxia-induced resistance and that its dominant-negative isoform suppressed resistance acquisition. However, MDR1 and MRP1, which provide multidrug resistance to conventional anticancer agents, were not induced by hypoxia.

CONCLUSIONS

These results suggest that HIF-1alpha-dependent gene expression participates in the cellular process of the hypoxia-induced resistance to phenolic compounds.

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