Data from: Investigation of discriminant metabolites in tamoxifen-resistant and choline kinase-alpha-downregulated breast cancer cells using 1H-nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy
Metabolites linked to changes in choline kinase-α (CK-α) expression and drug resistance, which contribute to survival and autophagy mechanisms, are attractive targets for breast cancer therapies. We previously reported that autophagy played a causative role in driving tamoxifen (TAM) resistance of b...
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Zusammenfassung: | Metabolites linked to changes in choline kinase-α (CK-α) expression and
drug resistance, which contribute to survival and autophagy mechanisms,
are attractive targets for breast cancer therapies. We previously reported
that autophagy played a causative role in driving tamoxifen (TAM)
resistance of breast cancer cells (BCCs) and was also promoted by CK-α
knockdown, resulting in the survival of TAM-resistant BCCs. There is no
comparative study yet about the metabolites resulting from BCCs with
TAM-resistance and CK-α knockdown. Therefore, the aim of this study was to
explore the discriminant metabolic biomarkers responsible for TAM
resistance as well as CK-α expression, which might be linked with
autophagy through a protective role. A total of 33 intracellular
metabolites, including a range of amino acids, energy metabolism-related
molecules and others from cell extracts of the parental cells (MCF-7),
TAM-resistant cells (MCF-7/TAM) and CK-α knockdown cells (MCF-7/shCK-α,
MCF-7/TAM/shCK-α) were analyzed by proton nuclear magnetic resonance
spectroscopy (1H-NMRS). Principal component analysis (PCA) and partial
least square discriminant analysis (PLS-DA) revealed the existence of
differences in the intracellular metabolites to separate the 4 groups:
MCF-7 cells, MCF-7/TAM cells, MCF-7-shCK-α cells, and MCF-7/TAM/shCK-α
cells. The metabolites with VIP>1 contributed most to the
differentiation of the cell groups, and they included fumarate, UA
(unknown A), lactate, myo-inositol, glycine, phosphocholine, UE (unknown
E), glutamine, formate, and AXP (AMP/ADP/ATP). Our results suggest that
these altered metabolites would be promising metabolic biomarkers for a
targeted therapeutic strategy in BCCs that exhibit TAM-resistance and
aberrant CK-α expression, which triggers a survival and drug resistance
mechanism. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.64f8c |