Cells (Aug 2024)
Experimental Study: The Development of a Novel Treatment for Chemotherapy-Resistant Tongue Cancer with the Inhibition of the Pathological Periostin Splicing Variant 1-2 with Exon 21
Abstract
Tongue squamous cell carcinoma (TSCC) occurs frequently in the oral cavity, and because of its high proliferative and metastatic potential, it is necessary to develop a novel treatment for it. We have reported the importance of the inhibition of the periostin (POSTN) pathological splicing variant, including exon 21 (PN1-2), in various malignancies, but its influence is unclear in tongue cancer. In this study, we investigated the potential of POSTN exon 21-specific neutralizing antibody (PN21-Ab) as a novel treatment for TSCC. Human PN2 was transfected into the human TSCC (HSC-3) and cultured under stress, and PN2 was found to increase cell viability. PN2 induced chemotherapy resistance in HSC-3 via the phosphorylation of the cell survival signal Akt. In tissues from human TSCC and primary tumors of an HSC-3 xenograft model, PN1-2 was expressed in the tumor stroma, mainly from fibroblasts. The intensity of PN1-2 mRNA expression was positively correlated with malignancy. In the HSC-3 xenograft model, CDDP and PN21-Ab promoted CDPP’s inhibition of tumor growth. These results suggest that POSTN exon 21 may be a biomarker for tongue cancer and that PN21-Ab may be a novel treatment for chemotherapy-resistant tongue cancer. The treatment points towards important innovations for TSCC, but many more studies are needed to extrapolate the results.
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