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Ribophorin II (RPN2) as a novel therapeutic target for cancer stem cells
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Cancer Science & Therapy

ISSN: 1948-5956

Open Access

Ribophorin II (RPN2) as a novel therapeutic target for cancer stem cells


International Conference & Exhibition on Cancer Science & Therapy

15-17 August 2011 Las Vegas, USA

Takahiro Ochiya

National Cancer Center Research Institute, Japan

Scientific Tracks Abstracts: J Cancer Sci Ther

Abstract :

The survival rate for women with advanced, metastatic breast cancer has not changed significantly for decades. Regardless of effective therapies, many women still experience recurrences of breast cancer after treatment. Docetaxel has been shown to be beneficial in the treatment of breast cancer; however, almost half of treated patients do not respond to it and many tumors develop resistance. At present no method exists to predict response to docetaxel or to detect resistance. Moreover, target molecules to increase the efficacy of chemotherapy have not yet been identified. Here we found that inhibition of the ribophorin II (RPN2), a part of oligosaccharyltransferase (OST) complex, promoted docetaxel-dependent apoptosis and inhibited cell growth in a docetaxel-resistant human breast cancer cell line. Silencing of RPN2 resulted in decreased glycosylation and membrane localization of the P-glycoprotein efflux pump, which caused increased sensitization of drug resistant cells to docetaxel (Nat Med, 2008). We also currently found that RPN2 is highly expressed in breast cancer stem cells. Knockdown of RN2 in cancer stem cells by shRPN2 vector system allowed a significant inhibition of cancer growth and lymph node metastasis in vivo. We also found that small non-coding RNA tightly regulates RPN2 gene expression. RPN2 could, therefore, have clinical applications as a target for micromanaging cancer stem cells.

Biography :

Dr. Takahiro Ochiya is Chief of Division of Molecular and Cellular Medicine at the National Cancer Center Research Institute, Tokyo and he is also appointed as a invited professor of Waseda University (since 2004) and Tokyo Institute of Technology (since 2008). After he got Ph.D. in 1988 in Osaka University and then went to do a post-doc at La Jolla Cancer Research (Burnham Institute for Medical Research), CA, USA. Dr. Ochiya’s lab focuses the development of novel animal models, methods, and strategies to study cancer development and metastasis. Especially, current focus are siRNA- and microRNA-based therapy against cancer stem cells.

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Citations: 3968

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