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Doxorubicin induces cell senescence preferentially over apoptosis in the FU-SY-1 synovial sarcoma cell line

✍ Scribed by David E. Joyner; Jeffrey D. Bastar; R. Lor Randall


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2006
Tongue
English
Weight
120 KB
Volume
24
Category
Article
ISSN
0736-0266

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Surgical resection coupled with adjuvant radiotherapy and/or doxorubicin based chemotherapy are the mainstays of synovial sarcoma (SS) treatment. Although effective as a SS adjuvant, the proposed mechanism of action of doxorubicin remains controversial. Current opinion supports DNA damage‐induced apoptosis. This in vitro study used cDNA gene expression profiling to investigate whether apoptosis, alone or in combination with cell senescence, is induced by doxorubicin in SS cells. Cell cultures of the FU‐SY‐1 SS, the pleomorphic SW982 sarcoma, and a primary dermal fibroblast (NHDF), were exposed to 500 nM doxorubicin, and then processed for cDNA microarray analysis. The one class response option of SAM (Significance Analysis of Microarrays) was used to test for significant overexpression of 15 apoptosis‐related genes and nine senescence‐related genes. Drug‐induced cell senescence was quantified by measuring β‐galactosidase activity. None of 15 apoptosis‐related genes and only two of nine senescence‐related genes were identified by SAM as significantly overexpressed in doxorubicin‐treated cultures. Drug‐induced senescence as reflected by β‐galactosidase activity was significantly increased (p < 0.05) only in FU‐SY‐1 SS cultures. Apoptosis does not appear to be a major determinant of doxorubicin‐induced mortality in FU‐SY‐1 SS or NHDF cultures, but may impact SW982 cells via the overexpression of BAX relative to Bcl‐2. Doxorubicin‐induced cell senescence was prominent in FU‐SY‐1 SS cultures, but negligible in SW982 and NHDF cultures. Likely, both apoptosis and cell senescence contribute to doxorubicin‐induced cell death in this synovial sarcoma cell line. © 2006 Orthopaedic Research Society. Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Orthop Res 24:1163–1169, 2006


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✍ David E. Joyner; Karen H. Albritton; Jeffrey D. Bastar; R. Lor Randall 📂 Article 📅 2006 🏛 Elsevier Science 🌐 English ⚖ 182 KB

## Abstract Synovial sarcoma (SS) is a highly aggressive, periarticular soft tissue sarcoma that causes death in more than half of affected children, adolescents, and young adults. Five‐ and 10‐year survival rates are as low as 36 and 20%, respectively. Bcl‐2, a negative regulator of apoptosis, is