Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.457, No.4, 614-620, 2015
Cholesterol reduces the sensitivity to platinum-based chemotherapy via upregulating ABCG2 in lung adenocarcinoma
Inoperable lung adenocarcinoma is currently treated with platinum-based chemotherapy. However, the effectiveness of these chemotherapeutic agents is not the same for all patients. Patients either show quick chemoresistance (QCR) or delayed chemoresistance (DCR), which are defined by 87 and 242 days of progression-free survival (IFS) after initial platinum-based treatment, respectively. We found that QCR patients displayed an elevated level of serum cholesterol and that their tumors showed upregulated ABCG2 expression. We propose that chemoresistance may be attributed to cholesterol-induced ABCG2 expression and hypothesize that blocking ABCG2 may increase the efficacy of platinum-based chemotherapeutic agents. Using the MTT cell viability assay, we observed that cotreatment with ABCG2 blacker Nicardipine and platinum-based drugs Cisplatin, Oxaliplatin or Carboplatin significantly decreased cell viability of tumor cells. Importantly, our results also showed that incubating cells with cholesterol prior to chemotherapy treatment or cotreatment increased cell viability of tumor cells relative to the controls. (C) 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.