Anti-miR-518d-5p Overcomes Liver Tumor Cell Death Resistance Through Mitochondrial Activity
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Date
2021-05-28Author
Fernández Tussy, Pablo
Rodríguez Agudo, Rubén
Fernández Ramos, David
Barbier Torres, Lucía
Zubiete Franco, Imanol
López de Davalillo, Sergio
Herráez Aguilar, Elisa
Goikoetxea Usandizaga, Naroa
Lachiondo Ortega, Sofía
Simón Espinosa, Jorge
Lopitz Otsoa, Fernando
Gutiérrez de Juan, Virginia
McCain, Misti V.
Perugorria Montiel, María Jesús
Mabe Alvarez, Jon
Navasa, Nicolás
Rodrigues, Cecilia M. P.
Fabregat, Isabel
Boix, Loreto
Sapena, Victor
Anguita Castillo, Juan de Dios
Lu, Shelly C.
Mato, José M.
Villa, Erica
Reeves, Helen L.
Bruix, Jordi
Reig, María
Marín, José J. G.
Cardoso Delgado, Teresa de Jesús
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Cell Death And Disease 12(6) : (2021) // Article ID 555
Abstract
Dysregulation of miRNAs is a hallmark of cancer, modulating oncogenes, tumor suppressors, and drug responsiveness. The multi-kinase inhibitor sorafenib is one of the first-line drugs for advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), although the outcome for treated patients is heterogeneous. The identification of predictive biomarkers and targets of sorafenib efficacy are sorely needed. Thus, selected top upregulated miRNAs from the C19MC cluster were analyzed in different hepatoma cell lines compared to immortalized liver human cells, THLE-2 as control. MiR-518d-5p showed the most consistent upregulation among them. Thus, miR-518d-5p was measured in liver tumor/non-tumor samples of two distinct cohorts of HCC patients (n=16 and n=20, respectively). Circulating miR-518d-5p was measured in an independent cohort of HCC patients receiving sorafenib treatment (n=100), where miR-518d-5p was analyzed in relation to treatment duration and patient's overall survival. In vitro and in vivo studies were performed in human hepatoma BCLC3 and Huh7 cells to analyze the effect of miR-518d-5p inhibition/overexpression during the response to sorafenib. Compared with healthy individuals, miR-518d-5p levels were higher in hepatic and serum samples from HCC patients (n=16) and in an additional cohort of tumor/non-tumor paired samples (n=20). MiR-518d-5p, through the inhibition of c-Jun and its mitochondrial target PUMA, desensitized human hepatoma cells and mouse xenograft to sorafenib-induced apoptosis. Finally, serum miR-518d-5p was assessed in 100 patients with HCC of different etiologies and BCLC-stage treated with sorafenib. In BCLC-C patients, higher serum miR-518d-5p at diagnosis was associated with shorter sorafenib treatment duration and survival. Hence, hepatic miR-518d-5p modulates sorafenib resistance in HCC through inhibition of c-Jun/PUMA-induced apoptosis. Circulating miR-518d-5p emerges as a potential lack of response biomarker to sorafenib in BCLC-C HCC patients.