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Bioimpacts. 2023;13(4): 313-321.
doi: 10.34172/bi.2023.27490
PMID: 37645026
PMCID: PMC10460766
Scopus ID: 85168127787
  Abstract View: 304
  PDF Download: 218
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Original Article

Exosomes are involved in the intercellular transfer of rapamycin resistance in the breast cancer cells

Yuri Yu. Shchegolev 1 ORCID logo, Danila V. Sorokin 1, Alexander M. Scherbakov 1* ORCID logo, Olga E. Andreeva 1 ORCID logo, Diana I. Salnikova 1 ORCID logo, Ekaterina I. Mikhaevich 1 ORCID logo, Margarita V. Gudkova 1 ORCID logo, Mikhail A. Krasil’nikov 1 ORCID logo

1 Department of Experimental Tumor Biology, Institute of Carcinogenesis, N.N. Blokhin National Medical Research Center of Oncology, Kashirskoye Shosse 24, Moscow 115522, Russia
*Corresponding Author: Alexander M. Scherbakov, Email: alex.scherbakov@gmail.com

Abstract

Introduction: Resistance to chemotherapy and/or irradiation remains one of the key features of malignant tumors, which largely limits the efficiency of antitumor therapy. In this work, we studied the progression mechanism of breast cancer cell resistance to target drugs, including mTOR blockers, and in particular, we studied the exosome function in intercellular resistance transfer.
Methods: The cell viability was assessed by the MTT assay, exosomes were purified by successive centrifugations, immunoblotting was used to evaluate protein expression, AP-1 activity was analyzed using reporter assay.
Results: In experiments on the MCF-7 cell line (breast cancer) and the MCF-7/Rap subline that is resistant to rapamycin, the capability of resistant cell exosomes to trigger a similar rapamycin resistance in the parent MCF-7 cells was demonstrated. Exosome-induced resistance reproduces the changes revealed in MCF-7/Rap resistant cells, including the activation of ERK/AP-1 signaling, and it remains for a long time, for at least several months, after exosome withdrawal. We have shown that both the MCF-7 subline resistant to rapamycin and cells having exosome-triggered resistance demonstrate a stable decrease in the expression of DNMT3A, the key enzyme responsible for DNA methylation. Knockdown of DNMT3A in MCF-7 cells by siRNA leads to partial cell resistance to rapamycin; thus, the DNMT3A suppression is regarded as one of the necessary elements for the development of acquired rapamycin resistance.
Conclusion: We propose that DNA demethylation followed by increased expression of key genes may be one of the factors responsible for the progression and maintenance of the resistant cell phenotype that includes exosome-induced resistance.
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Submitted: 23 Jun 2022
Revision: 17 May 2023
Accepted: 20 May 2023
ePublished: 01 Jul 2023
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