iScience
Volume 24, Issue 4, 23 April 2021, 102325
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Article
DNA repair and cholesterol-mediated drug efflux induce dose-dependent chemoresistance in nutrient-deprived neuroblastoma cells

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.isci.2021.102325Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • The survival rate was increased on nutrient-deprived human neuroblastoma cells

  • Performed proteomics and network analysis-based pharmacodynamic study

  • DNA repair was accelerated resistance in nutrient-deprived human neuroblastoma cells

  • Cholesterol-mediated efflux was increased at resistance conditions

Summary

Neuroblastoma is a solid, heterogeneous pediatric tumor. Chemotherapy is widely used to treat neuroblastoma. However, dose-dependent responses and chemoresistance mechanisms of neuroblastoma cells to anticancer drugs remain challenging. Here, we investigated the dose-dependent effects of topotecan on human neuroblastoma cells (SK-N-SH, SH-SY5Y, and SK-N-BE) under various nutrient supply conditions. Serum-starved human neuroblastoma cells showed reduced toxicity. Their survival rate increased upon treatment with a high concentration (1 μM) of topotecan. Quantitative profiling of global and phosphoproteome identified 12,959 proteins and 48,812 phosphosites, respectively, from SK-N-SH cells. Network analysis revealed that topotecan upregulated DNA repair and cholesterol-mediated topotecan efflux, resulting in topotecan resistance. Results of DNA damage assay, cell cycle, and quantitative analyses of membrane cholesterol supported the validity of these resistance factors and their applicability to all neuroblastoma cells. Our results provide a model for high dose-dependent chemoresistance in neuroblastoma cells that could enable a patient-dependent chemotherapy screening strategy.

Subject areas

Molecular Biology
Cancer
Proteomics

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