Investigator

Jolanta Szenajch

Researcher · Military Institute of Medicine, Laboratory for Molecular Oncology and Innovative Therapies

About

Research Interests

JSJolanta Szenajch
Papers(1)
Transcriptome Remodel…
Collaborators(3)
Aleksandra ŚwierczAlicja Szabelska-Berę…Idzi Siatkowski
Institutions(3)
Wojskowy Instytut Med…Institute of Bioorgan…Poznan University of …

Papers

Transcriptome Remodeling in Gradual Development of Inverse Resistance between Paclitaxel and Cisplatin in Ovarian Cancer Cells

Resistance to anti-cancer drugs is the main challenge in oncology. In pre-clinical studies, established cancer cell lines are primary tools in deciphering molecular mechanisms of this phenomenon. In this study, we proposed a new, transcriptome-focused approach, utilizing a model of isogenic cancer cell lines with gradually changing resistance. We analyzed trends in gene expression in the aim to find out a scaffold of resistance development process. The ovarian cancer cell line A2780 was treated with stepwise increased concentrations of paclitaxel (PTX) to generate a series of drug resistant sublines. To monitor transcriptome changes we submitted them to mRNA-sequencing, followed by the identification of differentially expressed genes (DEGs), principal component analysis (PCA), and hierarchical clustering. Functional interactions of proteins, encoded by DEGs, were analyzed by building protein-protein interaction (PPI) networks. We obtained human ovarian cancer cell lines with gradually developed resistance to PTX and collateral sensitivity to cisplatin (CDDP) (inverse resistance). In their transcriptomes, we identified two groups of DEGs: (1) With fluctuations in expression in the course of resistance acquiring; and (2) with a consistently changed expression at each stage of resistance development, constituting a scaffold of the process. In the scaffold PPI network, the cell cycle regulator—polo-like kinase 2 (PLK2); proteins belonging to the tumor necrosis factor (TNF) ligand and receptor family, as well as to the ephrin receptor family were found, and moreover, proteins linked to osteo- and chondrogenesis and the nervous system development. Our cellular model of drug resistance allowed for keeping track of trends in gene expression and studying this phenomenon as a process of evolution, reflected by global transcriptome remodeling. This approach enabled us to explore novel candidate genes and surmise that abrogation of the osteomimic phenotype in ovarian cancer cells might occur during the development of inverse resistance between PTX and CDDP.

12Works
1Papers
3Collaborators
Ovarian NeoplasmsCell Line, TumorTumor Microenvironment

Positions

2000–

Researcher

Military Institute of Medicine · Laboratory for Molecular Oncology and Innovative Therapies

1992–

Research Assistant

Central Clinical Hospital of Military Academy of Medicine · Department of Immunology

1986–

deputy head of department

Research and Development Centre of Biotechnology · Department of Biotechnology

Education

2013

Kozminski University · Postgraduate studies "Management of Innovation in the Health Service"

1986

extra-curriculum

University of Warsaw · Faculty of Philosophy

1986

M.Sc.

University of Warsaw · Faculty of Biology

Country

PL

Keywords
ovarian cancertranscriptomicsdrug resistanceerythropoietin