Abstract

P21-activated kinase 4 (PAK4) involves in cell proliferation in cancer and mutually regulates with p53, a molecule is demonstrated to control cell autophagy by mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR)/protein kinase B (AKT) signaling. Since the signaling exhibits an association with PAK family members in cell autophagy, it implies that PAK4-relevant proliferation may be impacted by autophagy via p53 with a lack of evidence in cancer cells. In this research, transient and stable PAK4-knockdown human hepatocarcinoma cell lines (HepG2) were constructed by transfection of PAK4-RNA interference (RNAi) plasmid and lentivirus containing PAK4-RNAi plasmid, respectively. We investigated cell proliferation using methyl thiazolyl tetrazolium (MTT) and Cell Counting Kit 8 (CCK8) assays, cell cycle by flow cytometry (FCM) and cell autophagy by monodansylcadaverine (MDC) staining and autophagic biomarker's expression, and detected the expressions of p53, mTOR, phosphorylated-AKT (p-AKT) and AKT by immunofluorescence and western blot to explore the mechanism. We successfully constructed transient and stable PAK4-knockdown HepG2 cell lines, and detected dysfunction of the cells' proliferation. An increased expression of p53, as a molecule of cell-cycle-surveillance on G1/S phase, was demonstrated in the cells although the cell cycle blocked at G2/M. And then, we detected increased autophagosome and autophagic biomarker LC3-II, and decreased expressions in p-AKT and mTOR. The proliferation is reduced in PAK4-knockdown HepG2 cells, which is relative to not only cell cycle arrest but also cell autophagy, and p53/mTOR/p-AKT signaling involves in the cell progress. The findings provide a new mechanism on PAK4 block in cancer therapy.

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