PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Ultrasound-induced new cellular mechanism involved in drug resistance.

  • Mariame A Hassan,
  • Yukihiro Furusawa,
  • Masami Minemura,
  • Natalya Rapoport,
  • Toshiro Sugiyama,
  • Takashi Kondo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0048291
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 12
p. e48291

Abstract

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The acoustic effects in a biological milieu offer several scenarios for the reversal of multidrug resistance. In this study, we have observed higher sensitivity of doxorubicin-resistant uterine sarcoma MES-SA/DX5 cells to ultrasound exposure compared to its parent counterpart MES-SA cells; however, the results showed that the acoustic irradiation was genotoxic and could promote neotic division in exposed cells that was more pronounced in the resistant variant. The neotic progeny, imaged microscopically 24 hr post sonication, could contribute in modulating the final cell survival when an apoptotic dose of doxorubicin was combined with ultrasound applied either simultaneously or sequentially in dual-treatment protocols. Depending on the time and order of application of ultrasound and doxorubicin in combination treatments, there was either desensitization of the parent cells or sensitization of the resistant cells to doxorubicin action.