Abstract
Ovarian cancer, a leading cause of gynecological cancer deaths globally, poses significant treatment challenges. Cisplatin (CDDP) is the first treatment choice for ovarian cancer and it is initially effective. However, 80% of ovarian cancer patients eventually relapse and develop resistance, resulting in chemotherapy failure. Therefore, finding new treatment combinations to overcome ovarian cancer resistance can provide a new tactic to improve the ovarian cancer patients' survival rate. We first identified activation of the Unfolded Protein Response (UPR) in CDDP-resistant ovarian cancer cells, implicating the IRE1α/XBP1 pathway in promoting resistance. Our findings demonstrate that inhibiting IRE1α signaling can re-sensitizes resistant cells to CDDP in vivo and in vitro, suggesting that IRE1α inhibitor used in conjunction with CDDP presumably could merge as a novel therapeutic strategy. Here, our research highlights the critical role of IRE1α signaling in mediating CDDP resistance, and paves the way for improved treatment options through combinatorial therapy.
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