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Título
Relevance of transportome among the mechanisms of chemoresistance in hepatoblastoma
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Multidrug resistance
Pediatric liver cancer
Prognosis
Resistome
Sensitization
Tumor heterogeneity
Clasificación UNESCO
farmacologia
Fecha de publicación
2025-07
Editor
Elsevier Inc.
Citación
Cives-Losada, C., Asensio, M., Briz, O., Chinchilla-Tábora, L. M., Barranco, M. M., Río-Álvarez, Á. D., Martinez-Chantar, M. L., Avila, M. A., Cairo, S., Armengol, C., Marin, J. J. G., & Macias, R. I. R. (2025). Relevance of transportome among the mechanisms of chemoresistance in hepatoblastoma. Biochemical Pharmacology, 237, 116914. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bcp.2025.116914
Resumen
[EN]Approximately 20 % of hepatoblastomas (HBs) exhibit a poor response to conventional chemotherapy due to mechanisms of chemoresistance (MOCs), such as reduced intracellular drug accumulation. This study evaluated the role of transportome in the multidrug resistance (MDR) of HB. Paired HB and adjacent liver tissue samples (n = 19) and HB-derived cell lines (HepG2, HuH6) were analyzed for their resistome characterization at mRNA (RT-qPCR, Taqman Low-Density Array, sequencing) and protein (western blot, immunohistochemistry, immunofluorescence) levels. Cell viability (MTT test) proliferation and migration (holographic microscopy) were determined. The impact of short-term (72 h) and long-term (>10 months) exposure of HB cells to cisplatin or doxorubicin on the transportome was investigated. Solute carrier (SLC) family of transporters showed minor relevance in HB MDR, while drug export pumps, particularly MRP2, were associated with poor response to chemotherapy. Exposure of HB cells to doxorubicin or cisplatin up-regulated MDR1, MRP1 and MRP2. In cells with induced persistent chemoresistance, the expression of genes involved in other MOCs, and epigenetic machinery was altered. Chemoresistant cells showed cross-resistance to several anticancer drugs but maintained sensitivity to cabozantinib. In conclusion, drug export pumps, but not SLC uptake transporters, are key contributors to HB chemoresistance. Cabozantinib emerges as a potential therapeutic option for HBs resistant to conventional chemotherapy.
URI
ISSN
0006-2952
DOI
10.1016/J.BCP.2025.116914
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