Abstract

Chemotherapy remains the primary treatment of advanced solid cancer, including lung cancer. However, as first-line treatment, cisplatin-based therapy is restricted by the frequent development of drug resistance. Increasing data showed that the programmed cell death protein ligand 1 (PD-L1) plays a vital role in regulating cisplatin resistance. However, the underlying mechanisms are not fully understood. We found that miR-526b-3p expression declined while PD-L1 was elevated in cisplatin-resistant lung cancer compared to that in cisplatin-sensitive lung cancer by analyzing clinical samples. Significantly, miR-526b-3p was associated with response to cisplatin negatively. We further demonstrated that miR-526b-3p reversed cisplatin resistance, suppressed metastasis, and activated CD8+ T cells in a STAT3/PD-L1-dependent manner. Thus, our findings extended the knowledge of PD-L1-mediated cisplatin resistance of lung cancer. In addition, the introduction of miR-526b-3p provided a new clue to improve the anti-tumor effects of the combination of immunotherapy and chemotherapy.

Highlights

  • Platinum-based therapy is one of the most common chemotherapies against solid cancer, including lung cancer

  • The frequent development of resistance prevents the continuous use of cisplatin and leads to treatment failure

  • We found that miR-526b-3p overexpression enhanced the response to cisplatin while attenuating cell growth and migration in cisplatin-resistant lung cancer cells

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Summary

Introduction

Platinum-based therapy is one of the most common chemotherapies against solid cancer, including lung cancer. Along with radiation therapy, is used to treat advanced lung cancer. Side effects and drug resistance are two main challenges that restrain the application and response of cisplatin [1]. Accumulating evidence shows that STAT3, MEK1, and AKT are frequently dysregulated in cisplatin-resistant cancer [2,3,4]. Therapies that targeted hyperactive genes are developed to diminish cisplatin resistance. The clinic outcomes of cisplatinresistant cancer are not satisfactory

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