Abstract

Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma (OSCC) is the sixth most common cancer worldwide. Chemoresistance is a critical problem in OSCC leading to therapeutic failure and tumour recurrence. Recently, autophagy has acquired an emerging interest in cancer as it has been shown to be frequently activated in tumour cells treated with chemotherapeutics. Whether drug-induced autophagy represents a mechanism that allows cancer cells to survive or a pro-death mechanism associated with apoptosis remains controversial. This study evaluated the cellular response to cisplatin and the role of autophagy in mediating cisplatin resistance in OSCC cells. Our results demonstrated that cisplatin concurrently induced apoptosis and autophagy in OSCC cell lines partially through the ROS/JNK pathway. Moreover, inhibition of cisplatin-induced apoptosis abrogated autophagy, indicating a complex interplay between these pathways. Cisplatin-induced autophagy does not appear to elicit a pro-survival effect in OSCC as early-stage autophagy inhibition, using either a pharmacological inhibitor or knockdown of the key autophagy protein ATG5, did not sensitise cells to cisplatin. Additionally, autophagy did not play a role in acquired resistance to cisplatin in our novel cisplatin-resistant OSSC cell line (SCC-4cisR) obtained by pulsed stepwise exposure of SCC-4 cells to cisplatin (~14-fold change in sensitivity). There was no change in the basal levels of autophagy in the SCC-4cisR cells compared to the SCC-4 cells. Furthermore, a significant increase in cisplatin-induced autophagy was observed only in the SCC-4 cells, but not in the derived SCC-4cisR cells. Collectively, these data indicate that autophagy may not be implicated in acquired cisplatin resistance in OSCC.

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