Experimental and Molecular Medicine (Jul 2020)

Cancer cells undergoing epigenetic transition show short-term resistance and are transformed into cells with medium-term resistance by drug treatment

  • Shiv Poojan,
  • Seung-Hyun Bae,
  • Jae-Woong Min,
  • Eun Young Lee,
  • Yura Song,
  • Hee Yeon Kim,
  • Hye Won Sim,
  • Eun-Kyung Kang,
  • Young-Ho Kim,
  • Hae-Ock Lee,
  • Yourae Hong,
  • Woong-Yang Park,
  • Hyonchol Jang,
  • Kyeong-Man Hong

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s12276-020-0464-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 52, no. 7
pp. 1102 – 1115

Abstract

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Cancer chemotherapy: treatment prolongs resistance caused by DNA modification Cancer cells that are transiently resistant to drug therapies owing to changes in their gene expression patterns can become resistant for longer durations if exposed to the drug treatments. A team led by Kyeong-Man Hong and Hyonchol Jang from the National Cancer Center in Goyang, South Korea, used cellular reprogramming technologies to induce changes in the DNA markers that regulate gene expression. Working with lung and gastric cancer cell lines, the researchers found that such epigenetic alterations caused many cells to become resistant to the chemotherapy drugs cisplatin and paclitaxel. In the absence of treatment, the cells soon lost their drug resistance. In the presence of the chemotherapeutics, however, the resistance trait lasted longer, a finding that could inform best practice for how to administer cancer-fighting agents in the face of epigenetic-driven drug resistance.