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. 2007 Oct;58(1):21-9.
doi: 10.1016/j.lungcan.2007.05.013. Epub 2007 Jul 12.

Downregulation of Sirt1 by antisense oligonucleotides induces apoptosis and enhances radiation sensitization in A549 lung cancer cells

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Downregulation of Sirt1 by antisense oligonucleotides induces apoptosis and enhances radiation sensitization in A549 lung cancer cells

Yuning Sun et al. Lung Cancer. 2007 Oct.

Abstract

Sirt1, a conserved nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD(+))-dependent deacetylase, has been implicated in modulating transcriptional silencing and cell survival, and seems to play a key role in carcinogenesis through deacetylation of important regulatory proteins. This makes it a potential target in cancer therapy. The purpose of this study was to determine whether inhibition of Sirt1 by using antisense oligonucleotides (ASODN) induces apoptosis and enhances radiation sensitization in A549 lung cancer cells. Initially, transient transfection of A549 lung cancer cells with ASODN against Sirt1 specifically reduced Sirt1 expression in a dose-dependent and sequence-specific manner, at both mRNA and proteins levels. The inhibition of Sirt1 obviously decreased A549 cells survival, induced G1 arrest as well as apoptosis. Furthermore, the inhibition of Sirt1 by ASODN greatly increased radiation-induced antiproliferation effects involving in increasing acetylation of tumour suppressor p53 and Bax expression in A549 lung cancer cells. In summary, our results indicate that downregulation of Sirt1 by ASODN decreases survival and increases radiation-induced antiproliferation effects of human lung cancer cells and suggest that inhibition of Sirt1 by ASODN may be a potential gene therapy approach to the treatment of lung cancer.

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