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      Antisense Targeting of Thymidylate Synthase (TS) mRNA Increases TS Gene Transcription and TS Protein: Effects on Human Tumor Cell Sensitivity to TS Enzyme-Inhibiting Drugs

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          Abstract

          Thymidylate synthase (TS) catalyses the only de novo pathway to produce thymidylate for DNA replication and repair and is an important target for cancer chemotherapy. Preexisting or acquired drug resistance in tumor cells limits clinical efficacy of TS-targeting drugs. Cells selected for higher TS protein activity have decreased sensitivity to TS-targeting chemotherapeutic agents (5-FUdR and raltitrexed). New therapeutic strategies are required to overcome treatment resistance. Among these, upregulation of drug resistance mediators in normal, nontarget cells and/or antisense downregulation of those mediators (alone or in combination with protein-targeting drugs) are candidate strategies. We have targeted human TS mRNA with antisense oligodeoxynucleotides (AS ODNs), complementary to the translation start site (TSS), the coding region, and the 3′ untranslated region. We report here that, in response to treatment with a novel TSS-targeting AS ODN 791, TS gene transcription in a human cervical carcinoma cell line (HeLa) was unexpectedly increased by 70%. Interestingly, the increased TS gene transcription and nuclear TS RNA did not elevate levels of total cellular TS mRNA, but did increase TS protein activity by 35% and TS protein level by 150%. Increased TS protein activity and level did not alter proliferation rate or sensitivity to TS-targeting drugs (5-FUdR or raltitrexed). To assess concentration-dependent effects of TS on sensitivity to TS-targeting drugs, incremental increases of TS protein levels were generated by transfection of a mammalian TS expression vector. Increases in TS protein of less than approximately 400% did not significantly affect sensitivity to TS-targeting drugs, while greater TS protein levels did. These data indicate that AS ODNs targeting TS mRNA can upregulate TS expression and activity in a manner dependent on the sequence being targeted, and that there exists a threshold increase (greater than approximately 400–700% in HeLa cells), required to initiate resistance to TS-targeting drugs.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Gene Expr
          GE
          Gene Expression
          Cognizant Communication Corporation (Elmsford, NY )
          1052-2166
          1555-3884
          2007
          05 July 2018
          : 13
          : 4-5
          : 227-239
          Affiliations
          [1]*The London Regional Cancer Program, London Health Sciences Centre , London, Ontario, Canada
          [2]†Lawson Health Research Institute, London Health Sciences Centre , London, Ontario, Canada
          [3]‡Department of Oncology, University of Western Ontario , London, Ontario, Canada
          [4]§Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Western Ontario , London, Ontario, Canada
          [5]¶Department of Pathology, University of Western Ontario , London, Ontario, Canada
          [6]#Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, University of Western Ontario , London, Ontario, Canada
          Author notes
          Address correspondence to James Koropatnick, Victoria Research Laboratories, The London Regional Cancer Program, London Health Sciences Centre, London, Ontario, Canada, N6A 4L6. Tel: (519) 685-8654; Fax: (519) 685-8616; E-mail: jkoropat@ 123456uwo.ca
          Article
          PMC6032463 PMC6032463 6032463 GE-13-227
          6032463
          17605297
          6cb13ec4-4df8-49cc-9d20-6a6fc7e52327
          Copyright © 2007 Cognizant Comm. Corp.
          History
          Page count
          Figures: 10, Tables: 0, References: 38, Pages: 13
          Categories
          Article

          Antisense oligodeoxynucleotides,Thymidylate synthase,Chemotherapy,Drug resistance,Run-on transcription,Threshold

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