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Mad1 mediates hypoxia-induced doxorubicin resistance in colon cancer cells by inhibiting mitochondrial function.

Free radical biology & medicine (2013-03-06)
Kumsun Cho, Hyun-Woo Shin, Young-Im Kim, Chung-Hyun Cho, Yang-Sook Chun, Tae-You Kim, Jong-Wan Park
RÉSUMÉ

Cancer cells acquire resistance to chemotherapy under hypoxia, which is mainly driven by the transcription factor HIF (hypoxia-inducible factor). Yet, it is uncertain which molecules mediate such resistance. While profiling gene expression in colon cancer cells, we found that Mad1 (MAX dimerization protein 1) is substantially induced during hypoxia. The hypoxic induction of Mad1 was confirmed by RT-PCR and Western blotting. The Mad1 expression was attenuated by HIF-1α small interfering (si) RNAs, but less so by HIF-2α siRNAs. Moreover, luciferase reporter and chromatin immunoprecipitation analyses revealed that HIF-1 transactivates the MAD1 gene by directly targeting a putative hypoxia-response element in the MAD1 promoter. We next investigated if Mad1 is responsible for the hypoxia-induced drug resistance. We treated colon cancer cells with doxorubicin and found that the cells under hypoxia survived more than those under normoxia. The doxorubicin resistance was not induced in Mad1-knocked-down cells even under hypoxia. Mad1 knockdown reactivated the caspase-9/caspase-3/PARP apoptotic pathway under hypoxia. Moreover, doxorubicin-induced production of reactive oxygen species was significantly reduced under hypoxia, which was reversed by Mad1 knockdown. During hypoxia, mitochondria became bigger in size and less active in respiration, both of which were attenuated by Mad1 knockdown. These data indicate that hypoxia-induced Mad1 lowers doxorubicin-stimulated generation of reactive oxygen species through mitochondrial inhibition and subsequently contributes to tumor resistance to doxorubicin. Therefore, Mad1 could be a potential target for sensitizing cancer cells to redox-cycling drugs such as doxorubicin.