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Vol. 61, Issue 3, 659-666, March 2002
Department of Medical Oncology, University Hospital
Rotterdam-Daniel den Hoed Cancer Center, Rotterdam, the Netherlands
The therapeutic potential of the highly active anticancer agent
cisplatin is severely limited by the occurrence of cellular resistance.
A better understanding of the molecular pathways involved in
cisplatin-induced cell death could potentially indicate ways to
overcome cellular unresponsiveness to the drug and thus lead to better
treatment results. We used the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae as a model organism to identify and characterize
novel genes involved in cisplatin-induced cell kill, and found that SKY1 (SR-protein-specific kinase from budding yeast) is
a cisplatin sensitivity gene whose disruption conferred cisplatin
resistance. In cross-resistance studies, we observed resistance of
yeast sky1
cells (i.e., cells from which the
SKY1 gene had been disrupted) to cisplatin, carboplatin
(but not oxaliplatin), doxorubicin and daunorubicin, and
hypersensitivity to cadmium chloride and 5-fluorouracil. Furthermore,
these cells did not display reduced platinum accumulation, DNA
platination or doxorubicin accumulation, indicating that the resistance
is unrelated to decreased drug import or increased drug export. Based
on the modification of the anticancer drug sensitivity profile and our
finding that sky1
cells display a mutator phenotype,
we propose that Sky1p might play a significant role in specific repair
and/or tolerance pathways. Disruption of the S. cerevisiae
SKY1 gene would thus result in deregulation of such mechanisms
and, consequently, lead to altered drug sensitivity.
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P. W. Schenk, M. Brok, A. W. M. Boersma, J. A. Brandsma, H. Den Dulk, H. Burger, G. Stoter, J. Brouwer, and K. Nooter Anticancer Drug Resistance Induced by Disruption of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae NPR2 Gene: a Novel Component Involved in Cisplatin- and Doxorubicin-Provoked Cell Kill Mol. Pharmacol., August 1, 2003; 64(2): 259 - 268. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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