Abstract

BackgroundChemotherapy and/or immunotherapy are first-line treatments for advanced muscle-invasive bladder cancer (BCa), but the unsatisfactory objective response rate to these treatments yields poor 5-year patient survival. Discovery of therapeutic targets essential for BCa maintenance is critical to improve therapy response in clinic. This study evaluated the role of targeting WD repeat domain 5 (WDR5) with the small molecule compound OICR-9429 and whether it could be used to treat bladder cancer.MethodsWe analysed the expression and clinical prognosis of WDR5 in a TCGA cohort. The pharmacological role of OICR-9429 was further investigated in vitro and in vivo. RNA sequencing, western blot, and chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) were utilized to explored the mechanism underlying OICR-9429-induced WDR5 inhibition.ResultsFirst, we found that WDR5 expression was upregulated in BCa and was associated with histologic grade, metastasis status, histologic subtype, and molecular subtype. High WDR5 expression level was also correlated with shorter overall survival (OS) in BCa. The WDR5 inhibitor OICR-9429 reduced cell viability by decreasing H3K4me3 levels but not WDR5 levels in T24, UM-UC-3, and TCCSUP BCa cells. OICR-9429 suppressed the proliferation of BCa cells by blocking the G1/S phase transition. Next, OICR-9429 enhanced apoptosis and chemosensitivity to cisplatin in BCa cells. In addition, OICR-9429 independently inhibited the motility and metastatic behaviour of BCa cells. In vivo experiments further revealed that OICR-9429 suppressed tumour growth, enhanced chemosensitivity, and reduced the toxicity of cisplatin in BCa. Notably, WDR5 was positively correlated with programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) expression, and OICR-9429 suppressed immune evasion by blocking PD-L1 induced by IFN-γ. Mechanistically, some cell cycle-, antiapoptosis-, DNA repair-, metastasis-, and immune evasion-related genes, including BIRC5, XRCC2, CCNB1, CCNE2, PLK1, AURKA, FOXM1, and PD-L1 were identified to be directly regulated by OICR-9429 in a H3K4me3-dependent manner.ConclusionsOur novel finding is that the WDR5 inhibitor, OICR-9429, suppressed proliferation, metastasis and PD-L1-based immune evasion while enhancing apoptosis and chemosensitivity to cisplatin in BCa by blocking the WDR5-MLL complex mediating H3K4me3 in target genes. Hence, our findings offer insight into a multipotential anticancer compound, OICR-9429, which enhances the antitumour effect of cisplatin or immunotherapy in BCa.

Highlights

  • Chemotherapy and/or immunotherapy are first-line treatments for advanced muscle-invasive bladder cancer (BCa), but the unsatisfactory objective response rate to these treatments yields poor 5-year patient survival

  • Our novel finding is that the WD repeat domain 5 (WDR5) inhibitor, OICR-9429, suppressed proliferation, metastasis and PDL1-based immune evasion while enhancing apoptosis and chemosensitivity to cisplatin in BCa by blocking the WDR5-MLL complex mediating Histone H3 lysine tri-methylation (H3K4me3) in target genes

  • WDR5 is upregulated in bladder cancer and correlates with poor prognosis Our previous study revealed that WDR5 was upregulated in BCa tissue by immunohistochemistry (IHC), and WDR5 expression positively correlated with the poor overall survival of BCa patients at Sun Yat-sen Memorial Hospital (SYSMH) cohort [13]

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Summary

Introduction

Chemotherapy and/or immunotherapy are first-line treatments for advanced muscle-invasive bladder cancer (BCa), but the unsatisfactory objective response rate to these treatments yields poor 5-year patient survival. Muscle-invasive BCa (MIBC) represents 25–40% of all BCa and is a life-threatening disease that can spread from the bladder to other organs, leading to almost 100% of deaths from this disease [3, 4]. Novel immunotherapy, represented by monoclonal antibodies against programmed cell death-1 (PD-1) and its ligand, PD-L1, has been recently approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for treating of BCa. the objective response rate of these checkpoint inhibitors in BCa is only 17.8–24% [6]. It is urgent to develop novel therapeutics for MIBC, either as single agents or in combination with standard chemotherapy regimens

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