Content area

Abstract

Receptor-interacting protein kinase-3 (RIP3 or RIPK3) is an essential part of the cellular machinery that executes "programmed" or "regulated" necrosis. Here we show that programmed necrosis is activated in response to many chemotherapeutic agents and contributes to chemotherapy-induced cell death. However, we show that RIP3 expression is often silenced in cancer cells due to genomic methylation near its transcriptional start site, thus RIP3-dependent activation of MLKL and downstream programmed necrosis during chemotherapeutic death is largely repressed. Nevertheless, treatment with hypomethylating agents restores RIP3 expression, and thereby promotes sensitivity to chemotherapeutics in a RIP3-dependent manner. RIP3 expression is reduced in tumors compared to normal tissue in 85% of breast cancer patients, suggesting that RIP3 deficiency is positively selected during tumor growth/development. Since hypomethylating agents are reasonably well-tolerated in patients, we propose that RIP3-deficient cancer patients may benefit from receiving hypomethylating agents to induce RIP3 expression prior to treatment with conventional chemotherapeutics.

Details

Title
Methylation-dependent loss of RIP3 expression in cancer represses programmed necrosis in response to chemotherapeutics
Author
Koo, Gi-bang; Morgan, Michael J; Lee, Da-gyum; Kim, Woo-jung; Yoon, Jung-ho; Koo, Ja Seung; Kim, Seung Il; Kim, Soo Jung; Son, Mi Kwon; Hong, Soon Sun; Levy, Jean M Mulcahy; Pollyea, Daniel A; Jordan, Craig T; Yan, Pearlly; Frankhouser, David; Nicolet, Deedra; Maharry, Kati; Marcucci, Guido; Choi, Kyeong Sook; Cho, Hyeseong; Thorburn, Andrew; Kim, You-sun
Pages
707-725
Publication year
2015
Publication date
Jun 2015
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
ISSN
10010602
e-ISSN
17487838
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1684972146
Copyright
Copyright Nature Publishing Group Jun 2015