Abstract

Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) is a common malignant disease characterized by poor prognosis. Chemoresistance remains a major cause of ESCC relapse. Vaccinia-related kinase 1 (VRK1) has previously been identified as a cancer-related gene. However, there is little research demonstrating an association between VRK1 and ESCC. In this study, we show that VRK1 is overexpressed in ESCC primary tumor samples and cell lines. VRK1 expression was significantly correlated with clinical characteristics and predicted poor outcomes in ESCC patients. Functionally, knockdown of VRK1 inhibited ESCC cell proliferation, survival, migration and invasion; conversely, VRK1 overexpression produced the opposite effects. Furthermore, we found that up-regulation of VRK1 promoted cisplatin (CDDP) resistance in ESCC both in vitro and in vivo, whereas knockdown of VRK1 reduced this resistance. Further studies verified that VRK1 phosphorylated c-Jun and that the VRK1/c-Jun pathway contributed to CDDP resistance in ESCC. Mechanistically, a dual luciferase reporter assay revealed that c-Jun transcriptionally activated the expression of c-MYC. Silencing c-MYC abolished the c-Jun-mediated CDDP resistance of ESCC cells. A Kaplan-Meier analysis indicated that c-MYC is a potential prognostic factor in ESCC. Finally, luteolin, a VRK1 inhibitor, attenuated the malignant biological behaviors and CDDP resistance in ESCC cells. Collectively, we conclude that VRK1 promotes CDDP resistance through c-MYC by activating c-Jun and potentiating a malignant phenotype in ESCC. Our studies provide novel insight into the role of VRK1 in carcinogenesis and indicate that VRK1 can serve as a potential therapeutic target in ESCC.

Highlights

  • Esophageal carcinoma is the eighth most common malignant disease and ranks as the sixth leading cause of cancer-related death worldwide [1]

  • Our results indicated that Vaccinia-related kinase 1 (VRK1) up-regulates c-MYC through c-Jun activation and that this axis is responsible for VRK1-mediated CDDP resistance

  • Recent studies have uncovered the role of VRK1 in cell proliferation and cancer

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Summary

Introduction

Esophageal carcinoma is the eighth most common malignant disease and ranks as the sixth leading cause of cancer-related death worldwide [1]. VRK1 (vaccinia-related kinase 1) is one of the three members of the VRK family of Ser-Thr kinases that participate in cell division, transcriptional activation, DNA repair and histone modification [6,7,8,9]. VRK1 can stabilize and activate numerous transcription factors, such as ATF2, CREB, p53 and histone H3, via phosphorylation [10,11,12,13]. VRK1 promotes the formation of 53BP1 foci in response to ionizing radiation-induced DNA damage and participates in the DNA damage response (DDR) by phosphorylating H2AX and NBS1 [7, 14, 15]

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