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Contribution of mitochondrial activity to doxorubicin-resistance in osteosarcoma cells

Authors :
Isabella Giacomini
Margherita Cortini
Mattia Tinazzi
Nicola Baldini
Veronica Cocetta
Eugenio Ragazzi
Sofia Avnet
Monica Montopoli
Giacomini I
Cortini M
Tinazzi M
Baldini N
Cocetta V
Ragazzi E
Avnet S
Montopoli M
Source :
Cancers, Volume 15, Issue 5, Pages: 1370
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Osteosarcoma is considered the most common bone tumor affecting children and young adults. The standard of care is chemotherapy; however, the onset of drug resistance still jeopardizes osteosarcoma patients, thus making it necessary to conduct a thorough investigation of the possible mechanisms behind this phenomenon. In the last decades, metabolic rewiring of cancer cells has been proposed as a cause of chemotherapy resistance. Our aim was to compare the mitochondrial phenotype of sensitive osteosarcoma cells (HOS and MG-63) versus their clones when continuously exposed to doxorubicin (resistant cells) and identify alterations exploitable for pharmacological approaches to overcome chemotherapy resistance. Compared with sensitive cells, doxorubicin-resistant clones showed sustained viability with less oxygen-dependent metabolisms, and significantly reduced mitochondrial membrane potential, mitochondrial mass, and ROS production. In addition, we found reduced expression of TFAM gene generally associated with mitochondrial biogenesis. Finally, combined treatment of resistant osteosarcoma cells with doxorubicin and quercetin, a known inducer of mitochondrial biogenesis, re-sensitizes the doxorubicin effect in resistant cells. Despite further investigations being needed, these results pave the way for the use of mitochondrial inducers as a promising strategy to re-sensitize doxorubicin cytotoxicity in patients who do not respond to therapy or reduce doxorubicin side effects.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancers, Volume 15, Issue 5, Pages: 1370
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....611324840e56a53a1d31f193f44e0d04