Tracing of intracellular pH in cancer cells in response to Taxol treatment.

2021 
Genetically encoded pH-sensors are the promising instrument for intracellular pH (pHi) registration. In tumor tissue the reversed pH gradient is known to be the important hallmark of cancer and regulator of tumor response on chemotherapy. However the effect of chemotherapeutic drugs on the pHi of tumor cells is largely unknown. Here we using genetically encoded ratiometric pH-sensor SypHer2 were able to monitor pHi in vitro in cell monolayer and tumor spheroids and in vivo in tumor xenografts. In tumor cell monolayer different pHi dynamic was revealed in the dying cell and division-arrested surviving cells. The treatment effect of taxol varied in monolayer and tumor spheroids and pHi changes were able to reflect these difference. The tend to pHi decrease in respect to taxol in vivo matched with results obtained for the cell monolayer. Also in both cases the cell cycle-arrest was the main treatment effect in contrast to tumor spheroid, where the cell death was the primary result. These findings elucidate the significance of pHi in the mechanisms of taxol action on cervical cancer cells and will be valuable for development of new approaches for cancer treatment.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    44
    References
    1
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []