Abstract

Introduction: During breast cancer chemotherapy, the chemoresistance that frequently accompanies the treatment has become a big challenge. Long noncoding RNAs (LncRNAs) have been related to the development of chemoresistance in multiple cancer types. LncRNA DDX11-AS1 has shown a carcinogenic role in lung and colorectal cancer and was reported to enhance oxaliplatin resistance in gastric cancer and Taxol insensitivity in esophageal cancer. But its role in breast cancer chemotherapy drug resistance remains unknown. This study aimed to investigate the function and mechanism of lncRNA DDX11-AS1 in breast cancer chemoresistance. Methods: The relationship between DDX11-AS1 and adriamycin (ADR) resistance was confirmed by qPCR, cell viability tests, and survival analysis. Then, RNA immunoprecipitation was conducted to evaluate the interaction between DDX11-AS1 and RNA-binding protein LIN28A. The regulation effect of LIN28A on autophagy-related genes ATG7 or ATG12 was detected by RNA stability assay and Western blot. Their correlation analysis was evaluated in GEO datasets and further validated by immunohistochemical results. The clinical significance of DDX11-AS1, ATG7, or ATG12 was evaluated by Kaplan-Meier Plotter analysis. Results: Here, we reported DDX11-AS1 was significantly upregulated in chemoresistant breast cancer cells and overexpression of DDX11-AS1 promoted ADR resistance in breast cancer. LIN28A could interact with DDX11-AS1 and was involved in DDX11-AS1-mediated ADR resistance. Interfering with LIN28A reversed DDX11-AS1-induced ADR resistance. LIN28A could increase the protein level of ATG7 and ATG12 by increasing their mRNA stability. Survival analysis showed that ATG12 expression level was negatively correlated with the prognosis of breast cancer patients. Conclusion: This study clarifies the role of DDX11-AS1 in breast cancer chemoresistance and revealed a new mechanism, that is, interacting with LIN28A to stabilize ATG7 and ATG12 and jointly promote chemorefractory. These findings warrant further in vivo investigations to study DDX11-AS1 as a potential target to overcome chemoresistance.

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