Journal of Ovarian Research (Sep 2021)

Up-regulation of GSTT1 in serous ovarian cancer associated with resistance to TAXOL / carboplatin

  • Jing Zhang,
  • Suhong Xie,
  • Lei Zhou,
  • Xiaoyu Tang,
  • Xiaolin Guan,
  • Minjie Deng,
  • Hui Zheng,
  • Yanchun Wang,
  • Renquan Lu,
  • Lin Guo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13048-021-00873-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Serous ovarian cancer (SOC) is the most common women cancer and the leading cause of cancer-related mortality among the gynaecological malignancies. Although effective chemotherapeutics combined with surgery are developed for the treatment, the five-year survival rate is unsatisfactory due to chemoresistance. To overcome this shortcoming of chemotherapy, we established taxol and carboplatin resistant SOC cell lines for the understandings of the molecular and cellular mechanisms of chemoresistance. Here, we found that these chemoresistant cell lines showed less viability and proliferation, due to more cells arrested at G0/G1 phase. Glutathione-S-transferases-theta1 (GSTT1) was significantly upregulated in these chemoresistant cells, along with other chemoresistant genes. Meanwhile, GSTT1 expression was also significantly upregulated in the SOC patient tissues after taxol treatment, indicating this upregulation was physiologically relevant to chemotherapy. Further, suppression of GSTT1 expression by shRNA in SOC cell lines led to more sensitivity to drug treatment, through increasing divided cells and promoting cell death. Moreover, the expression of DNA topoisomerase 1 (Topo I) was in synergy with that of GSTT1 in the chemoresistant cells, and GSTT1 can bind to Topo I in vitro, which suggested GSTT1 could function through DNA repair mechanism during chemoresistance. In summary, our data imply that GSTT1 may be a potential biomarker or indicator of drug resistance in serous ovarian cancer.

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