Investigator
Chittaranjan National Cancer Institute
RETRACTED ARTICLE: Downregulation of Hyaluronic acid-CD44 signaling pathway in cervical cancer cell by natural polyphenols Plumbagin, Pongapin and Karanjin
Hyaluronic acid (HA)-CD44 pathway showed association with several malignancies. The natural polyphenols Plumbagin, Pongapin and Karanjin showed anti-cancer activities in different tumors including cervical carcinoma. To understand their mechanism of anti-cancer activity, the effect of the compounds on HA-CD44 pathway was analyzed in cervical cancer cell line HeLa. The mRNA expression of three different isoforms of CD44 i.e., CD44s, CD44v3, and CD44v6, was differentially downregulated by the compounds. This was validated by Western blot and immunocytochemical analysis of CD44s.The low molecular weight HA (LMW-HA) showed growth promoting activity in HeLa at low concentration, whereas high molecular weight HA (HMW-HA) had no such effect. The compounds could preferentially downregulate the LMW-HA level in HeLa, as evident in the cell as well as in the cell-free conditioned medium. Concentration-dependent upregulation of HA synthase-2 (HAS2) was seen in the cell by the compounds, whereas differential downregulation of hyalurinidases 1-4 (HYAL 1-4), predominantly HYAL1, were seen. The compounds could also downregulate the downstream target of the pathway p-AKT (T-308) in concentration-dependent manner. Thus, the compounds could attenuate the HA-CD44 pathway in HeLa cell to restrict the tumor growth.
Down-regulation of FA-BRCA Pathway in Cervical Carcinoma Gradually Reversed During the Development of Chemo-tolerance: Clinical Implications
Cervical cancer is one of the leading causes of cancer death among females, worldwide. The contributory role of different cellular pathways in the process of carcinogenesis is still poorly understood. Our study was focused here to understand the functional evaluation of key regulatory genes of FA-BRCA pathway in the development of CACX and their role in chemo-tolerance of the disease by analyzing the molecular profile of the genes both in normal and tumour tissue of our sample pool, also validated in in silico datasets. Later on, prognostic importance of the genes was further evaluated in plasma DNA and cisplatin-treated in vitro system. We found that expression profile of FA-BRCA pathway genes was gradually reduced from undifferentiated basal-parabasal layers of normal tissue towards the progression of the disease. Further analysis revealed that frequent promoter methylation [32-55%] and deletion [34-52%] events were the plausible reasons for their reduced expression in CACX. Noticeably, invasion of promoter methylation of the genes [11-17%] in plasma CTCs of CACX patients was positively correlated [p < 0.001] with poor prognosis among patients. On the other hand, functional upregulation of these genes at higher concentrations [IC50-70] of cisplatin was a predictor for the development of drug tolerance, as evaluated in our in vitro study. This finding was supported further by low prevalence of γ-H2X foci formation and reduced expression of DNMT1 at higher concentrations of cisplatin. In totality, we discovered that the FA-BRCA pathway must be inactivated for cancer formation. In contrast, elevated gene expression played a substantial role in building of chemo-tolerance and might be associated with developing increased risk of disease recurrence among patients.