Ribavirin restores ESR1 gene expression and tamoxifen sensitivity in ESR1 negative breast cancer cell lines

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Tumor growth is estrogen independent in approximately one-third of all breast cancers, which makes these patients unresponsive to hormonal treatment. This unresponsiveness to hormonal treatment may be explained through the absence of the estrogen receptor alpha (...

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Main Authors: Sappok Anne, Mahlknecht Ulrich
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2011-12-01
Series:Clinical Epigenetics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.clinicalepigeneticsjournal.com/content/3/1/8
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spelling doaj-0cc1a98fc76d4826a9143b280b7cc0ed2020-11-25T01:32:30ZengBMCClinical Epigenetics1868-70832011-12-0131810.1186/1868-7083-3-8Ribavirin restores ESR1 gene expression and tamoxifen sensitivity in ESR1 negative breast cancer cell linesSappok AnneMahlknecht Ulrich<p>Abstract</p> <p>Tumor growth is estrogen independent in approximately one-third of all breast cancers, which makes these patients unresponsive to hormonal treatment. This unresponsiveness to hormonal treatment may be explained through the absence of the estrogen receptor alpha (ESR1). The ESR1 gene re-expression through epigenetic modulators such as DNA methyltransferase inhibitors and/or histone deacetylase inhibitors restores tamoxifen sensitivity in ESR1 negative breast cancer cell lines and opens new treatment horizons in patients who were previously associated with a poor prognosis.</p> <p>In the study presented herein, we tested the ability of ribavirin, which shares some structural similarities with the DNA-methyltransferase inhibitor 5-azacytidine and which is widely known as an anti-viral agent in the treatment of hepatitis C, to restore ESR1 gene re-expression in ESR1 negative breast cancer cell lines.</p> <p>In our study we identified ribavirin to restore ESR1 gene re-expression alone and even more in combination with suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid (SAHA - up to 276 fold induction).</p> <p>Ribavirin and analogs could pave the way to novel translational research projects that aim to restore ESR1 gene re-expression and thus the susceptibility to tamoxifen-based endocrine treatment strategies.</p> http://www.clinicalepigeneticsjournal.com/content/3/1/8epigeneticestrogen receptor alphaHDACmethylationribavirinSAHA
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sappok Anne
Mahlknecht Ulrich
spellingShingle Sappok Anne
Mahlknecht Ulrich
Ribavirin restores ESR1 gene expression and tamoxifen sensitivity in ESR1 negative breast cancer cell lines
Clinical Epigenetics
epigenetic
estrogen receptor alpha
HDAC
methylation
ribavirin
SAHA
author_facet Sappok Anne
Mahlknecht Ulrich
author_sort Sappok Anne
title Ribavirin restores ESR1 gene expression and tamoxifen sensitivity in ESR1 negative breast cancer cell lines
title_short Ribavirin restores ESR1 gene expression and tamoxifen sensitivity in ESR1 negative breast cancer cell lines
title_full Ribavirin restores ESR1 gene expression and tamoxifen sensitivity in ESR1 negative breast cancer cell lines
title_fullStr Ribavirin restores ESR1 gene expression and tamoxifen sensitivity in ESR1 negative breast cancer cell lines
title_full_unstemmed Ribavirin restores ESR1 gene expression and tamoxifen sensitivity in ESR1 negative breast cancer cell lines
title_sort ribavirin restores esr1 gene expression and tamoxifen sensitivity in esr1 negative breast cancer cell lines
publisher BMC
series Clinical Epigenetics
issn 1868-7083
publishDate 2011-12-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Tumor growth is estrogen independent in approximately one-third of all breast cancers, which makes these patients unresponsive to hormonal treatment. This unresponsiveness to hormonal treatment may be explained through the absence of the estrogen receptor alpha (ESR1). The ESR1 gene re-expression through epigenetic modulators such as DNA methyltransferase inhibitors and/or histone deacetylase inhibitors restores tamoxifen sensitivity in ESR1 negative breast cancer cell lines and opens new treatment horizons in patients who were previously associated with a poor prognosis.</p> <p>In the study presented herein, we tested the ability of ribavirin, which shares some structural similarities with the DNA-methyltransferase inhibitor 5-azacytidine and which is widely known as an anti-viral agent in the treatment of hepatitis C, to restore ESR1 gene re-expression in ESR1 negative breast cancer cell lines.</p> <p>In our study we identified ribavirin to restore ESR1 gene re-expression alone and even more in combination with suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid (SAHA - up to 276 fold induction).</p> <p>Ribavirin and analogs could pave the way to novel translational research projects that aim to restore ESR1 gene re-expression and thus the susceptibility to tamoxifen-based endocrine treatment strategies.</p>
topic epigenetic
estrogen receptor alpha
HDAC
methylation
ribavirin
SAHA
url http://www.clinicalepigeneticsjournal.com/content/3/1/8
work_keys_str_mv AT sappokanne ribavirinrestoresesr1geneexpressionandtamoxifensensitivityinesr1negativebreastcancercelllines
AT mahlknechtulrich ribavirinrestoresesr1geneexpressionandtamoxifensensitivityinesr1negativebreastcancercelllines
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