Adaptation of cancer cells from different entities to the MDM2 inhibitor nutlin-3 results in the emergence of p53-mutated multi-drug-resistant cancer cells

Martin Michaelis(Goethe University Frankfurt), Florian Rothweiler(Goethe University Frankfurt), Susanne Barth, Jindřich Činátl(Goethe University Frankfurt), Marijke van Rikxoort(Goethe University Frankfurt), Nadine Löschmann(Goethe University Frankfurt), Yvonne Voges(Goethe University Frankfurt), Rainer Breitling(University of Glasgow), Andreas von Deimling(DKFZ-ZMBH Alliance), Franz Rödel(Goethe University Frankfurt), Kristoffer Weber(Universität Hamburg), Boris Fehse(Universität Hamburg), Elisabeth Mack(Philipps University of Marburg), Thorsten Stiewe(Philipps University of Marburg), Hans Wilhelm Doerr(Goethe University Frankfurt), Daniel Speidel(University of Sydney), Jindřich Činátl(Goethe University Frankfurt)
Cell Death and Disease
December 15, 2011
Cited by 197Open Access
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Abstract

Six p53 wild-type cancer cell lines from infrequently p53-mutated entities (neuroblastoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, and melanoma) were continuously exposed to increasing concentrations of the murine double minute 2 inhibitor nutlin-3, resulting in the emergence of nutlin-3-resistant, p53-mutated sublines displaying a multi-drug resistance phenotype. Only 2 out of 28 sublines adapted to various cytotoxic drugs harboured p53 mutations. Nutlin-3-adapted UKF-NB-3 cells (UKF-NB-3(r)Nutlin(10 μM), harbouring a G245C mutation) were also radiation resistant. Analysis of UKF-NB-3 and UKF-NB-3(r)Nutlin(10 μM) cells by RNA interference experiments and lentiviral transduction of wild-type p53 into p53-mutated UKF-NB-3(r)Nutlin(10 μM) cells revealed that the loss of p53 function contributes to the multi-drug resistance of UKF-NB-3(r)Nutlin(10 μM) cells. Bioinformatics PANTHER pathway analysis based on microarray measurements of mRNA abundance indicated a substantial overlap in the signalling pathways differentially regulated between UKF-NB-3(r)Nutlin(10 μM) and UKF-NB-3 and between UKF-NB-3 and its cisplatin-, doxorubicin-, or vincristine-resistant sublines. Repeated nutlin-3 adaptation of neuroblastoma cells resulted in sublines harbouring various p53 mutations with high frequency. A p53 wild-type single cell-derived UKF-NB-3 clone was adapted to nutlin-3 in independent experiments. Eight out of ten resulting sublines were p53-mutated harbouring six different p53 mutations. This indicates that nutlin-3 induces de novo p53 mutations not initially present in the original cell population. Therefore, nutlin-3-treated cancer patients should be carefully monitored for the emergence of p53-mutated, multi-drug-resistant cells.


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