Cisplatin, oxaliplatin, and carboplatin unequally inhibit in vitro mRNA translation

Carboplatin
DOI: 10.1016/j.toxlet.2013.11.015 Publication Date: 2013-11-23T07:02:11Z
ABSTRACT
DNA is considered the preferential target of platinum containing cytostatics such as cisplatin, oxaliplatin, and carboplatin. Despite profound knowledge on the interaction between platinum drugs and DNA, there is little data on the interaction with mRNA and even less on the potential differences among these antineoplastic agents to inhibit protein synthesis. We therefore established an in vitro translation system using in vitro transcribed mRNA encoding green fluorescent protein (GFP) to evaluate the effects of exposure of GFP mRNA to 0-100 μM of cisplatin, oxaliplatin, or carboplatin. We additionally investigated the interaction between these drugs and mRNA through evaluation of crossing-points during quantitative real-time polymerase chain reactions. In contrast to oxaliplatin or carboplatin, 100 μM cisplatin significantly increased crossing-points by about 3 cycles (P<0.01) and profoundly attenuated translation of GFP mRNA (P<0.05). Oxaliplatin showed a trend to reduce GFP mRNA translation, whereas carboplatin entirely failed to influence it. In conclusion, this study for the very first time documents different effects of platinum cytostatics on mRNA translation and demonstrates mRNA to be a functionally relevant target of at least cisplatin.
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