Abstract

Autophagy regulates many cell function related to cancer, including cell proliferation, invasion and apoptosis. Therefore, we investigated the potential value of crosstalk between autophagy and apoptosis. The present study demonstrated that seven autophagy related genes were screened from the biological network of salidroside (Sal) acting on liver cancer. The GO analysis showed that these genes were mainly involved in apoptosis and autophagy. The KEGG analysis showed that these genes regulated the process of liver cancer through Th17 cell differentiation, PI3K-Akt signaling pathway and other pathways. Moreover, seven genes were positively correlated with tumor purity, number of B cells, number of CD4+ T cells, number of CD8+ T cells, number of macrophages, number of dendritic cells and number of neutrophils. The overall survival time of liver cancer patients in the high expression group of BIRC5, HSP90AB1 and MTOR was lower than that in the low expression group (P < 0.05), while the overall survival time of the liver cancer patients in the high expression group of DLC1 and FOXO1 was higher than that in the low expression group (P < 0.05). In the pan-cancer analysis, we also found that BIRC5, HSP90AB1, MTOR, and ITGA6 were highly expressed in various cancers, while DLC1, FOXO1, and FOS were low expressed in various cancers. In the molecule docking analysis, we found that FOS, HSP90AB1, and MTOR had the best binding ability. Notably, in the vitro validation experiments, Sal was confirmed to induce autophagy and apoptosis, inhibite invasion and metastasis of liver cancer cells through the PI3K/Akt/mTOR signaling pathway. Meanwhile, inhibition of autophagy by chloroquine diphosphate (CQ) promoted Sal-induced mitochondrial apoptosis via corresponding cell and animal experiments. We speculated that Sal-induced autophagy might be a protective mechanism, inhibition of autophagy could further promote the progression of liver cancer. It may provide important insight into the molecular mechanism of crosstalk between autophagy and apoptosis, and provide a new theoretical basis of Sal combined with autophagy inhibitors as a adjuvant chemotherapeutic strategy for human liver cancer.

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