Back to Search Start Over

Cysteine boosters the evolutionary adaptation to CoCl2 mimicked hypoxia conditions, favouring carboplatin resistance in ovarian cancer

Authors :
Sofia C. Nunes
Filipa Lopes-Coelho
Sofia Gouveia-Fernandes
Cristiano Ramos
Sofia A. Pereira
Jacinta Serpa
Source :
BMC Evolutionary Biology, Vol 18, Iss 1, Pp 1-17 (2018)
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
BMC, 2018.

Abstract

Abstract Background Ovarian cancer is the second most common gynaecologic malignancy and the most common cause of death from gynaecologic cancer, especially due to diagnosis at an advanced stage, when a cure is rare. As ovarian tumour grows, cancer cells are exposed to regions of hypoxia. Hypoxia is known to be partially responsible for tumour progression, metastasis and resistance to therapies. These suggest that hypoxia entails a selective pressure in which the adapted cells not only have a fitness increase under the selective environment, but also in non-selective adverse environments. In here, we used two different ovarian cancer cell lines – serous carcinoma (OVCAR3) and clear cell carcinoma (ES2) – in order to address the effect of cancer cells selection under normoxia and hypoxia mimicked by cobalt chloride on the evolutionary outcome of cancer cells. Results Our results showed that the adaptation to normoxia and CoCl2 mimicked hypoxia leads cells to display opposite strategies. Whereas cells adapted to CoCl2 mimicked hypoxia conditions tend to proliferate less but present increased survival in adverse environments, cells adapted to normoxia proliferate rapidly but at the cost of increased mortality in adverse environments. Moreover, results suggest that cysteine allows a quicker response and adaptation to hypoxic conditions that, in turn, are capable of driving chemoresistance. Conclusions We showed that cysteine impacts the adaptation of cancer cells to a CoCl2 mimicked hypoxic environment thus contributing for hypoxia-drived platinum-based chemotherapeutic agents’ resistance, allowing the selection of more aggressive phenotypes. These observations support a role of cysteine in cancer progression, recurrence and chemoresistance.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14712148
Volume :
18
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
BMC Evolutionary Biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.f42219617e94ff980f1af6a0806bc1b
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12862-018-1214-1