Abstract

Taxol is the first-line chemo-drug for advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), but it frequently causes acquired resistance, which leads to the failure of treatment. Therefore, it is critical to screen and characterize the mechanism of the taxol-resistance reversal agent that could re-sensitize the resistant cancer cells to chemo-drug. The cell viability, sphere-forming and xenografts assay were used to evaluate the ability of ASIV to reverse taxol-resistance. Immunohistochemistry, cytokine application, small-interfering RNA, small molecule inhibitors, and RNA-seq approaches were applied to characterize the molecular mechanism of inhibition of epiregulin (EREG) and downstream signaling by ASIV to reverse taxol-resistance. ASIV reversed taxol resistance through suppression of the stemness-associated genes of spheres in NSCLC. The mechanism exploration revealed that ASIV promoted the K48-linked polyubiquitination of EREG along with degradation. Moreover, EREG could be triggered by chemo-drug treatment. Consequently, EREG bound to the ErbB receptor and activated the ERK signal to regulate the expression of the stemness-associated genes. Inhibition of EREG/ErbB/ERK could reverse the taxol-resistance by inhibiting the stemness-associated genes. Finally, it was observed that TGFβ and Hedgehog signaling were downstream of EREG/ErbB/ERK, which could be targeted using inhibitors to reverse the taxol resistance of NSCLC. These findings revealed that inhibition of EREG by ASIV reversed taxol-resistance through suppression of the stemness of NSCLC via EREG/ErbB/ERK-TGFβ, Hedgehog axis.

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