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AKT-induced tamoxifen resistance is overturned by RRM2 inhibition.

Molecular cancer research : MCR (2013-12-24)
Khyati N Shah, Kshama R Mehta, David Peterson, Marie Evangelista, John C Livesey, Jesika S Faridi
ABSTRACT

Acquired tamoxifen resistance develops in the majority of hormone-responsive breast cancers and frequently involves overexpression of the PI3K/AKT axis. Here, breast cancer cells with elevated endogenous AKT or overexpression of activated AKT exhibited tamoxifen-stimulated cell proliferation and enhanced cell motility. To gain mechanistic insight on AKT-induced endocrine resistance, gene expression profiling was performed to determine the transcripts that are differentially expressed post-tamoxifen therapy under conditions of AKT overexpression. Consistent with the biologic outcome, many of these transcripts function in cell proliferation and cell motility networks and were quantitatively validated in a larger panel of breast cancer cells. Moreover, ribonucleotide reductase M2 (RRM2) was revealed as a key contributor to AKT-induced tamoxifen resistance. Inhibition of RRM2 by RNA interference (RNAi)-mediated approaches significantly reversed the tamoxifen-resistant cell growth, inhibited cell motility, and activated DNA damage and proapoptotic pathways. In addition, treatment of tamoxifen-resistant breast cancer cells with the small molecule RRM inhibitor didox significantly reduced in vitro and in vivo growth. Thus, AKT-expressing breast cancer cells upregulate RRM2 expression, leading to increased DNA repair and protection from tamoxifen-induced apoptosis. These findings identify RRM2 as an AKT-regulated gene, which plays a role in tamoxifen resistance and may prove to be a novel target for effective diagnostic and preventative strategies.

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Didox, ≥98% (HPLC)