Silencing of High Mobility Group Isoform I-C (HMGI-C) enhances paclitaxel chemosensitivity in breast adenocarcinoma cells (MDAMB-468)
View/ Open
Date
2016Author
Mansoori, B
Mohammadi, A
Goldar, S
Shanehbandi, D
Mohammadnejad, L
Baghbani, E
Kazemi, T
Kachalaki, S
Baradaran, B
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Purpose: HMGI-C (High Mobility Group protein Isoform I-C) protein is a member of the high-mobility group AT-hook (HMGA) family of small non-histone chromosomal protein that can modulate transcription of an ample number of genes. Genome-wide studies revealed up regulation of the HMGI-C gene in many human cancers. We suggested that HMGI-C might play a critical role in the progression and migration of various tumors. However, the exact role of HMGI-C in breast adenocarcinoma has not been cleared. Methods: The cells were transfected with siRNAs using transfection reagent. Relative HMGI-C mRNA and protein levels were measured by quantitative real-time PCR and Western blotting, respectively. The cytotoxic effects of HMGI-C siRNA, Paclitaxel alone and combination on breast adenocarcinoma cells were determined using MTT assay. The migration after treatment by HMGI-C siRNA, Paclitaxel alone and combination were detected by wound-healing respectively. Results: HMGI-C siRNA significantly reduced both mRNA and protein expression levels in a 48 hours after transfection and dose dependent manner. We observed that the knockdown of HMGI-C led to the significant reduced cell viability and inhibited cells migration in MDA-MB-468 cells in vitro. Conclusion: These results propose that HMGI-C silencing and Paclitaxel treatment alone can inhibit the proliferation and migration significantly, furthermore, synergic effect of HMGI-C siRNA and Paclitaxel showed higher inhibition compared to mono treatment. Taken together, HMGI-C could be used as a promising therapeutic agent in the treatment of human breast adenocarcinoma. Therefore HMGI-C siRNA may be an effective adjuvant in human breast adenocarcinoma. © 2016 The Authors.
Collections
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Leuconostoc mesenteroides-derived anticancer pharmaceuticals hinder inflammation and cell survival in colon cancer cells by modulating NF-?B/AKT/PTEN/MAPK pathways
Zununi Vahed, S; Barzegari, A; Rahbar Saadat, Y; Goreyshi, A; Omidi, Y (2017)Promising results from different studies on the effect of probiotics in cancer prevention and therapy have so far been reported. However, the molecular mechanism of the interaction of probiotics with cancer cells is yet ... -
Solution structure of a tethered Lmo2LIM2/Ldb1LID complex
Dastmalchi, S; Wilkinson-White, L; Kwan, AH; Gamsjaeger, R; Mackay, JP; Matthews, JM (2012)LIM-only protein 2, Lmo2, is a regulatory protein that is essential for hematopoietic development and inappropriate overexpression of Lmo2 in T-cells contributes to T-cell leukemia. It exerts its functions by mediating ... -
DNA damage response and repair in colorectal cancer: Defects, regulation and therapeutic implications
Mirza-Aghazadeh-Attari, M; Darband, SG; Kaviani, M; Mihanfar, A; Aghazadeh Attari, J; Yousefi, B; Majidinia, M (2018)DNA damage response, a key factor involved in maintaining genome integrity and stability, consists of several kinase-dependent signaling pathways, which sense and transduce DNA damage signal. The severity of damage appears ...