Abstract

BackgroundRadiotherapy resistance is a major obstacle in the treatment of oesophageal squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC). Hypoxia is a critical cause of radioresistance. However, the communication between hypoxic cells and aerobic cells via exosomes during the transfer of radiation resistance remains unclear.MethodsExo-miR-340-5p levels were analysed by RNA-seq and qRT-PCR. We co-cultured OSCC cells with isolated normoxic and hypoxic exosomes to study their impact on radiosensitivity. We used a specific exo-miR-340-5p mimic and knock-down retrovirus to explore the role of this miRNA in the transfer of radioresistance from hypoxic to normoxic cells. Dual-luciferase reporter and RIP assays were used to verify KLF10 as a putative target of miR-340-5p. Several in vitro assays were conducted and xenograft models were established to investigate the effect of exo-miR-340-5p on OSCC radiosensitivity. The plasma exo-miR-340-5p levels in OSCC patients were analysed to study the clinical value of this parameter.ResultsHypoxic exosomes alleviated radiation-induced apoptosis and accelerated DNA damage repair. miR-340-5p was highly expressed in hypoxic exosomes and was transferred into normoxic cells, where it induced radioresistance. Overexpression of miR-340-5p in normoxic OSCC cells mimicked the radioresistance of cells co-cultured with hypoxic exosomes. Knockdown of miR-340-5p in hypoxic exosomes reversed the radioresistance effect, indicating that exo-miR-340-5p is critical for hypoxic EV-transferred radioresistance. KLF10 was identified as the direct target of miR-340-5p. Moreover, metformin was found to increase the expression of KLF10 and enhance the radiosensitivity of OSCC. Higher levels of miR-340-5p in the plasma exosomes from OSCC patients are related to a poorer radiotherapy response and prognosis.ConclusionsHypoxic tumour cell-derived exosomal miR-340-5p confers radioresistance in OSCC by targeting KLF10/UVRAG, suggesting that miR-340-5p could be a potential biomarker and therapeutic target for the enhancement of radiosensitivity in OSCC. Metformin can increase KLF10 expression, which ameliorates the radioresistance induced by exo-miR-340-5p transfer. Therefore, metformin could be further investigated as a therapeutic option for the treatment of OSCC.

Highlights

  • Radiotherapy resistance is a major obstacle in the treatment of oesophageal squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC)

  • We found by highthroughput sequencing that miR-340-5p is highly expressed in hypoxic OSCC extracellular vesicles (EVs). miR-340-5p is directly transferred to normoxic OSCC cells and targets Kruppel-like factor 10 (KLF10), a tumour suppressor

  • Hypoxic tumour cell-derived EVs alleviate ionizing radiation (IR)-induced apoptosis and promote radioresistance EVs secreted by three OSCC cell lines were isolated by differential centrifugation

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Summary

Introduction

Radiotherapy resistance is a major obstacle in the treatment of oesophageal squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC). Oesophageal cancer ranks sixth in cancer-associated deaths worldwide. It has been reported that 572,034 oesophageal cancer diagnoses and 508,585 deaths occurred in 2018 [1]. In China, more than 95% of oesophageal cancer patients are diagnosed with oesophageal squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) [2]. Most patients are diagnosed with locally advanced OSCC. For these patients, radiotherapy is an essential strategy [3]. The prognosis of OSCC has been disappointing over the past 30 years: more than 50% of patients experience recurrence within 2 years, suggesting the importance of enhancing the radiosensitivity of OSCC [4,5,6]

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