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  1. Home
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Browsing by Author "Montoya, M"

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    Increased gap junctional intercellular communication is directly related to the anti-tumor effect of all-trans-retinoic acid plus tamoxifen in a human mammary cancer cell line
    (2003) Sáez, CG; Velásquez, L; Montoya, M; Eugenín, E; Alvarez, MG
    Additive effects against tumor cells might be achieved by combining anti-neoplastic agents directed against one or more altered mechanisms in cancer. We investigated the participation of gap junctional intercellular communication (GJIC),which is commonly dysfunctional in tumor cells as a possible mediating mechanism of the effect of all-trans-retinoic acid (RA) and tamoxifen (Tx) in MCF-7 human breast cancer cell lines. The combination of RA+Tx stimulated GJIC in approximately 53+/-3% of MCF-7 cells as early as after 6 In of treatment remaining communicated through 144 h of culture. The GJIC enhancement occurred along with immunolocalization of Cx26 and 43 at the membrane of contacting cells and correlated with higher protein levels. Cx40 immunoreactive plaques were detected at cell-to-cell contacts during 48 h of RA+Tx treatment that did not involve higher protein expression, to the contrary, a downregulation occurred after 72 In of treatment. Cell proliferation inhibition upon RA+Tx exposure was observed with optimal effects at 96-120 h of culture with an accumulation of cells primarily in G2/M and G0/G1 cell cycle boundaries. An enhancement of the pre-existing E-cadherin levels was observed after drug exposure along with a downregulation of Bcl-2 and C-myc protein levels and a reduction of telomerase activity, suggesting partial tumor phenotype reversion. Blockage of the RA+Tx-induced GJIC with 18-beta-glycyrrhetinic acid (beta-Gly) prevented in 34% the inhibition of MCF-7 proliferation and the E-cadherin increment in 30% at 96 h of culture. GJIC blockage did not alter the downregulation of Bcl-2, c-Myc, or telomerase activity induced by RA+Tx. Our results showed the participation of GJIC as a mediator mechanism of the combined action of RA and Tx in MCF-7 cells. The chemopreventive modulation of GJIC might represent an approachable alternative for the improvement of cancer therapy.

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