Chk1 suppression leads to a reduction in the enhanced radiation-induced invasive capability on breast cancer cells

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Abstract

Radiation therapy is generally effective for treating breast cancers. However, approximately 30% of patients with breast cancer experience occasional post-treatment local and distant metastasis. Low-dose (0.5 Gy) irradiation is a risk factor that promotes the invasiveness of breast cancers. Although an inhibitor of checkpoint kinase 1 (Chk1) suppresses the growth and motility of breast cancer cell lines, no study has investigated the effects of the combined use of a Chk1 inhibitor and radiation on cancer metastasis. Here, we addressed this question by treating the human breast cancer cell line MDA-MB-231 (in vitro) and mouse mammary tumor cell line 4 T1 (in vitro and in vivo) with γ-irradiation and the Chk1 inhibitor PD407824. Low-dose γ-irradiation promoted invasiveness, which was suppressed by PD407824. Comprehensive gene expression analysis revealed that low-dose γ-irradiation upregulated the mRNA and protein levels of S100A4, the both of which were downregulated by PD407824. We conclude that PD407824 suppresses the expression of S100A4. As the result, γ-irradiation-induced cell invasiveness were inhibited.

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Adachi, T., Zhao, W., Minami, K., Yokoyama, Y., Okuzaki, D., Kondo, R., … Ogawa, K. (2021). Chk1 suppression leads to a reduction in the enhanced radiation-induced invasive capability on breast cancer cells. Journal of Radiation Research, 62(5), 764–772. https://doi.org/10.1093/jrr/rrab049

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