Abstract

This study examines the potential benefits of targeting cholesterol metabolism in combination with radiation therapy (RT) for treating Head and Neck Squamous Cell Carcinoma (HNSCC). Despite advancements in RT delivery, 60% of patients still experience a relapse within 2 years, highlighting the need for improved treatment strategies. Our hypothesis is that a specific, biological response to RT by a subset of tumor cells drives radio-resistance and recurrence, and that targeting cholesterol metabolism may be an effective way to improve RT efficacy. To identify radiation-induced biological responses, whole-genome RNA sequencing analysis was carried out on Cal27 (HPV-) and UMSCC47 (HPV+) cell lines after X-Ray (6MeV Linac) or proton (pencil beam scanning, center part of SOBP) radiations. Potential radio-resistance targets were identified by comparing RT-induced transcriptomic changes with publicly available GEO and TCGA transcriptomic data from human HNSCC samples. Cholesterol metabolism as a driver of HNSCC radio-resistance was validated in vitro by pharmacological and genetic approaches. Transcriptomic analysis revealed a significant increase in 11 genes related to sterol and cholesterol in both the Cal27 and UMSCC47 cell lines after radiation exposure (pathway functional enrichment analysis, p = 2.05e-05). High expression of these RT-induced cholesterol gene signatures correlated with decreased overall survival among HNSCC patients based on the TCGA database (log rank p = 0.022, HR = 1.4). Moreover, a Gene Set Enrichment Analysis of the GSE23036 dataset (pre-treatment HNSCC tumors: locoregional recurrence vs. nonrecurrence) also linked cholesterol metabolism and local recurrence (p = 0.002, FDR = 0.07, NES = 1.72). Single-cell RNA sequencing data from the GSE164690 dataset revealed high expression of cholesterol metabolism genes in human HNSCC epithelial and mesenchymal fractions. In vitro studies demonstrated that RT increased the nuclear translocation of the master transcription factors controlling cholesterol gene expression SREBP2 and increased the expression of the SREBP2 target gene SQLE at the protein level. In accordance with this result, RT increased cellular cholesterol content and uptake in human (p = 0.027) and murine (p = 0.015) HNSCC cell lines. Drug or genetic targeting of SREBP2 reduced cellular cholesterol levels in HNSCC cells and increased toxicity when combined with RT in both 2D and 3D cell cultures compared to RT alone. Targeting cholesterol metabolism in combination with RT could be beneficial for treating HNSCC. In vivo validation in immunocompetent mouse models and orthotopic patient-derived xenograft models is ongoing.

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