Abstract

Sorafenib, an orally available kinase inhibitor, is the standard first-line systemic drug for advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), and it exerts potent inhibitory activity against epithelial–mesenchymal transition (EMT) and multidrug resistance (MDR) by inhibiting mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling in HCC. However, after long-term exposure to sorafenib, HCC cells exhibit EMT and resistance to sorafenib. The activation of AKT by sorafenib is thought to be responsible for the development of these characteristics. The present study aims to examine the underlying mechanism and seek potential strategies to reverse this resistance and the progression to EMT. Sorafenib-resistant cells showed increased metastatic and invasive ability, with a higher expression of P-glycoprotein (P-gp), compared with the parental cells. This phenomenon was at least partially due to EMT and the appearance of MDR in sorafenib-resistant HCC cells. Moreover, MDR was a downstream molecular event of EMT. Silencing Snail with siRNA blocked EMT and partially reversed the MDR, thereby markedly abolishing invasion and metastasis in sorafenib-resistant HCC cells, but silencing of MDR1 had no effect on the EMT phenotype. Additionally, HCC parental cells that were stably transfected with pCDNA3.1-Snail exhibited EMT and MDR. Two sorafenib-resistant HCC cell lines, established from human HCC HepG2 and Huh7 cells, were refractory to sorafenib-induced growth inhibition but were sensitive to MK-2206, a novel allosteric AKT inhibitor. Thus, the combination of sorafenib and MK-2206 led to significant reversion of the EMT phenotype and P-gp-mediated MDR by downregulating phosphorylated AKT. These findings underscore the significance of EMT, MDR and enhanced PI3K/AKT signaling in sorafenib-resistant HCC cells.

Highlights

  • Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the most common histological type of primary liver cancer and the second largest cause of cancer-related death in men worldwide [1]

  • epithelial–mesenchymal transition (EMT) and multi-drug resistance (MDR) appears in sorafenib-resistant HCC cells

  • A zinc-finger transcriptional repressor that plays a key role in EMT-mediated tumour invasion and metastasis, was upregulated in the HepG2-SR and Huh7-SR cells when compared to the controls

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Summary

Introduction

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the most common histological type of primary liver cancer and the second largest cause of cancer-related death in men worldwide [1]. The overall prognosis of patients with liver cancer is poor, and only a minority of HCC patients are eligible for surgical resection due to late stage diagnosis [2]. Sorafenib exerts potent inhibitory activity against cell proliferation, invasion, metastasis and multi-drug resistance (MDR) by inhibiting MAPK signaling in HCC [5,6]. This promising treatment has demonstrated limited survival benefits (2.8 months) with very low response rates (2–3%) [3,4], and some advanced HCC patients under long-term treatment with sorafenib have enhanced tumour growth or distant metastasis [7], indicating that resistance to sorafenib is common in HCC

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