Abstract

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a cancer lacking effective therapies. Several measures have been proposed to treat HCCs, such as senescence induction, mitotic inhibition, and cell death promotion. However, data from other cancers suggest that single use of these approaches may not be effective. Here, by genetic targeting of Survivin, an inhibitor of apoptosis protein (IAP) that plays dual roles in mitosis and cell survival, we identified a tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα)‐mediated synergistic lethal effect between senescence and apoptosis sensitization in malignant HCCs. Survivin deficiency results in mitosis defect‐associated senescence in HCC cells, which triggers local inflammation and increased TNFα. Survivin inactivation also sensitizes HCC cells to TNFα‐triggered cell death, which leads to marked HCC regression. Based on these findings, we designed a combination treatment using mitosis inhibitor and proapoptosis compounds. This treatment recapitulates the therapeutic effect of Survivin deletion and effectively eliminates HCCs, thus representing a potential strategy for HCC therapy. Conclusion: Survivin ablation dramatically suppresses human and mouse HCCs by triggering senescence‐associated TNFα and sensitizing HCC cells to TNFα‐induced cell death. Combined use of mitotic inhibitor and second mitochondrial‐derived activator of caspases mimetic can induce senescence‐associated TNFα and enhance TNFα‐induced cell death and synergistically eliminate HCC. (Hepatology 2016;64:1105‐1120)

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