Translational Oncology (Dec 2014)

Sequential Salinomycin Treatment Results in Resistance Formation through Clonal Selection of Epithelial-Like Tumor Cells

  • Florian Kopp,
  • Adam Hermawan,
  • Prajakta Shirish Oak,
  • Vijay Kumar Ulaganathan,
  • Annika Herrmann,
  • Nefertiti Elnikhely,
  • Chitra Thakur,
  • Zhiguang Xiao,
  • Pjotr Knyazev,
  • Beyhan Ataseven,
  • Rajkumar Savai,
  • Ernst Wagner,
  • Andreas Roidl

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tranon.2014.09.002
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 6
pp. 702 – 711

Abstract

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Acquiring therapy resistance is one of the major obstacles in the treatment of patients with cancer. The discovery of the cancer stem cell (CSC)–specific drug salinomycin raised hope for improved treatment options by targeting therapy-refractory CSCs and mesenchymal cancer cells. However, the occurrence of an acquired salinomycin resistance in tumor cells remains elusive. To study the formation of salinomycin resistance, mesenchymal breast cancer cells were sequentially treated with salinomycin in an in vitro cell culture assay, and the resulting differences in gene expression and salinomycin susceptibility were analyzed. We demonstrated that long-term salinomycin treatment of mesenchymal cancer cells resulted in salinomycin-resistant cells with elevated levels of epithelial markers, such as E-cadherin and miR-200c, a decreased migratory capability, and a higher susceptibility to the classic chemotherapeutic drug doxorubicin. The formation of salinomycin resistance through the acquisition of epithelial traits was further validated by inducing mesenchymal-epithelial transition through an overexpression of miR-200c. The transition from a mesenchymal to a more epithelial-like phenotype of salinomycin-treated tumor cells was moreover confirmed in vivo, using syngeneic and, for the first time, transgenic mouse tumor models. These results suggest that the acquisition of salinomycin resistance through the clonal selection of epithelial-like cancer cells could become exploited for improved cancer therapies by antagonizing the tumor-progressive effects of epithelial-mesenchymal transition.