Ku protein targeting by Ku70 small interfering RNA enhances human cancer cell response to topoisomerase II inhibitor and gamma radiation.
نویسندگان
چکیده
Ku protein is a heterodimer (Ku70 and Ku86) known to play an important role in V(D)J recombination, apoptosis, telomere fusion, and double-strand break repair. Its role in double-strand breaks is relevant to cancer therapy because lack of Ku86 causes one of the most radiation-responsive phenotypes (hamster cells, XRS5). Although it is known that the heterodimer is necessary for the various functions of this protein, the impact of targeting Ku in human cancer cells has not been shown due to lack of appropriate approaches. It is also not known whether complete knock-out of Ku protein is required to enhance the sensitivity of human cells to gamma radiation as Ku protein is much more abundant in human cells than in hamster cells. In the current article, we have investigated the direct effect of Ku70 depletion in human cervical epithelioid (HeLa) and colon carcinoma (HCT116) cells. We specifically targeted Ku70 mRNA by use of small interfering RNA (siRNA). Of the five Ku70 siRNA synthesized, three inhibited the expression of Ku70 by up to 70% in HeLa cells. We have tested the effect of chemically synthesized siRNAs for target sequence 5 (CS #5) on the response of HeLa cells 72 hours after transfection to gamma radiation and etoposide, as this showed the maximum inhibition of Ku70 expression. Ku70 siRNA induced a decrease in the surviving fraction of irradiated HeLa cells by severalfold. Similar sensitizing effects were observed for etoposide, a topoisomerase II inhibitor. Studies with HCT116 cells using the same Ku70 siRNA (CS #5) showed a direct correlation between expression of Ku70 and sensitization to radiation and etoposide treatments.
منابع مشابه
Ku protein targeting by Ku70 small interfering RNA enhances human cancer cell response to topoisomerase II inhibitor and ; radiation
Ku protein is a heterodimer (Ku70 and Ku86) known to play an important role in V(D)J recombination, apoptosis, telomere fusion, and double-strand break repair. Its role in double-strand breaks is relevant to cancer therapy because lack of Ku86 causes one of the most radiationresponsive phenotypes (hamster cells, XRS5). Although it is known that the heterodimer is necessary for the various funct...
متن کاملDifferential etoposide sensitivity of cells deficient in the Ku and DNA-PKcs components of the DNA-dependent protein kinase.
Etoposides block cell division by interfering with the action of topoisomerase II, leaving enzyme-DNA double-strand breaks. We found that certain components of the trimeric DNA-dependent protein kinase influence cell survival following etoposide damage. Interestingly, either Ku70- or Ku80-deficient cell lines, but not mutant cell lines of the DNA-PK catalytic sub-unit (DNA-PKcs), were found to ...
متن کاملThe Role of Tumor Protein 53 Mutations in Common Human Cancers and Targeting the Murine Double Minute 2–P53 Interaction for Cancer Therapy
The gene TP53 (also known as protein 53 or tumor protein 53), encoding transcription factor P53, is mutated or deleted in half of human cancers, demonstrating the crucial role of P53 in tumor suppression. There are reports of nearly 250 independent germ line TP53 mutations in over 100 publications. The P53 protein has the structure of a transcription factor and, is made up of several domains. T...
متن کاملLentivirus-mediated RNA interference of Ku70 to enhance radiosensitivity of human mammary epithelial cells.
PURPOSE To investigate the radiosensitising effect of Ku autoantigen 70 (Ku70) and Ku autoantigen 80 (Ku80) knockdown by lentivirus-mediated RNA interference (RNAi) in the MCF10A immortalised human mammary epithelial cell line. MATERIALS AND METHODS MCF10A cells were infected with lentiviral vectors for RNAi of Ku70. The Ku70-knockdown cell line (Ku70i) and a mock-infected control cell line (...
متن کاملTargeting of Chk2 as a countermeasure to dose-limiting toxicity triggered by topoisomerase-II (TOP2) poisons
The DNA damage response (DDR) gene cell cycle checkpoint kinase 2 (Chk2) triggers programmed cell death and lethal radiation-induced toxicity in mice in vivo. However, it is not well established to what extent targeting of Chk2 may protect from dose-limiting toxicities (DLT) inflicted by mainstay cancer chemotherapy. We screened different classes of chemotherapy in wild type and Chk2-deficient ...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
- Molecular cancer therapeutics
دوره 4 4 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2005