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Heterogeneous gene expression changes in colorectal cancer cells share the WNT pathway in response to growth suppression by APHS-mediated COX-2 inhibition
Original Research
(3067) Views (792) Full article downloads
Authors: Bostjan Humar, Les McNoe, Anita Dunbier, Rosemary Heathcott, Antony W Braithwaite, Anthony E Reeve
Published Date June 2008
Volume 2008:2(2) Pages 329 - 337
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/BTT.S2663
Bostjan Humar1, Les McNoe1, Anita Dunbier1, Rosemary Heathcott1, Antony W Braithwaite2, Anthony E Reeve1
1Cancer Genetics Laboratory, Department of Biochemistry; University of Otago, Dunedin, Aotearoa New Zealand; 2Children's Medical Research Institute, Wintworthbill, NSW, Australia
Abstract: Cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2), the prostaglandin (PG)-synthesizing enzyme overexpressed in colorectal cancer (CRC), has pleiotropic, cancer-promoting effects. COX-2
inhibitors (CIBs) interfere with many cancer-associated processes and show promising antineoplastic activity, however, a common mechanism of CIB action has not yet been established. We therefore investigated by microarray the global response towards the CIB APHS at a dose significantly inhibiting the growth of three COX-2-positive CRC but not of two COX-2-negative cell lines. None of the genes significantly (p = 0.005) affected by APHS were common to all three cell lines and 83% of the altered pathways were cell line-specific. Quantitative polymerase chain reaction (QPCR) on selected pathways confirmed cell line-specific expression alterations induced by APHS. A low stringency data analysis approach using BRB array tools coupled with QPCR, however, identified small expression changes shared by all COX-2-positive cell lines in genes related to the WNT pathway, the key driver of colonic carcinogenesis. Our data indicates a substantial cell line-specificity of APHS-induced expression alterations in CRC cells and helps to explain the divergent effects reported for CIBs. Further, the shared inhibition of the WNT pathway by APHS suggests one potential common mechanism behind the antineoplastic effects of COX-2 inhibition.
Keywords: antineoplastic drugs, cell lines, colon cancer, COX-2 inhibitors, DNA arrays, WNT factors
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