Establishment of human pancreatic cancer gemcitabine-resistant cell line with ribonucleotide reductase overexpression

30Citations
Citations of this article
48Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

A gemcitabine (GEM)-resistant human pancreatic cancer cell line (PANC-1RG7) was established in vitro by gradually increasing GEM concentrations and cloning cell cultures to develop a cellular model of acquired drug resistance studies. We found that PANC-1RG7 cells exhibited significantly different morphological characteristics from parental cells. PANC-1RG7 cells grew slowly (p<0.05), yet the cell cycle remained unchanged (p>0.05). PANC-1RG7, with a resistance index to GEM of 39.9, showed cross-resistance characteristics to methotrexate, gefitinib, cisplatin and 5-fluorouracil. The proliferation inhibition of GEM was significantly reduced in vivo (p<0.05). The known resistance-associated genes and proteins we detected remained unchanged, with the exception of cytidine deaminase, multidrug resistance-related protein and breast cancer resistance protein genes, which decreased; by contrast, 5'-nucleotidase, ribonucleotide reductase (RRM) 1 and RRM2 proteins increased (p<0.05). Therefore, a cell line with acquired GEM resistance was established successfully. Resistance was acquired by overexpressing RRM1 and RRM2 proteins.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Wang, C., Zhang, W., Juan Fu, M., Yang, A., Huang, H., & Xie, J. (2015). Establishment of human pancreatic cancer gemcitabine-resistant cell line with ribonucleotide reductase overexpression. Oncology Reports, 33(1), 383–390. https://doi.org/10.3892/or.2014.3599

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free