| Literature DB >> 30718500 |
Yang Li1,2, Li-Ru He2, Ying Gao3, Ning-Ning Zhou2, Yurong Liu1, Xin-Ke Zhou4, Ji-Fang Liu4, Xin-Yuan Guan2, Ning-Fang Ma5, Dan Xie6,7.
Abstract
Chromodomain helicase/ATPase DNA binding protein 1-like gene (CHD1L) is a recently identified gene associated with malignant tumor progression and patient chemotherapy resistance in human hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Previously, we found an association between CHD1L overexpression and poor patient survival in non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC). However, little is known about the relationship between CHD1L expression and chemotherapy resistance of NSCLC. By employing immunohistochemistry, we analyzed the expression of CHD1L in NSCLC samples and elucidated the roles and mechanism of CHD1L in NSCLC chemoresistance. We found that the increased expression of CHD1L is positively correlated with a shorter survival time of patients who had received chemotherapy after surgery. We also found that the expression of CHD1L was increased after cisplatin treatment in A549 cells. Conversely, the depletion of CHD1L in cisplatin-resistance cells increased the cell sensitivity to cisplatin, indicating that CHD1L plays a critical role in cisplatin resistance of NSCLC cells. Importantly, we identified the ATP-Binding Cassette Sub-Family B Member (ABCB1) gene as a potential downstream target of CHD1L in NSCLC cells. Knocking down ABCB1 coupled with ectopic expression of CHD1L enhanced the effect of cisplatin on NSCLC cells apoptosis. In addition, overexpressed CHD1L increase the transcription of c-Jun which targeted directly to the promoter of ABCB1. Our data demonstrate that CHD1L could induce cisplatin resistance in NSCLC via c-Jun-ABCB1-NF-κB axis, and may serve as a novel predictive marker and the potential therapeutic target for cisplatin resistance in NSCLC.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30718500 PMCID: PMC6362241 DOI: 10.1038/s41419-019-1371-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Death Dis Impact factor: 8.469
Fig. 1CHD1L overexpression correlates with worse outcome in cisplatin-treated advanced NSCLC patients and expression of CHD1L in NSCLC cell lines. a Immunohistochemistry showing positive nucleus staining in NSCLC patients for CHD1L, weak staining (left, original magnification, ×200); vs. strong staining (right, original magnification, ×200). The boxed regions are magnified and shown in the panel below (original magnification, ×400); scale bar:10 μm. b High CHD1L expression is correlated with poorer disease-free and overall survival rate in NSCLC patients (P<0.001). c The levels of CHD1L protein examined by western blotting in six different lung cancer cell lines
Correlation between the expression of CHD1L and therapy response in NSCLC patients (N = 30)
| CHD1L expression level | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cases | Normal expression | Overexpression | ||
| Chemotherapy response | ||||
| NC + PD | 18 | 5 (27.8%) | 13(72.2%) | |
| PR | 12 | 9 (75.0%) | 3 (25.0%) | |
NC no change, PD progressive disease, PR partial response
Fig. 2CHD1L suppresses cisplatin-induced apoptosis in NSCLC cells. a Western blotting reveals that CHD1L was efficiently knocked down by the treatment of CHD1L-shRNA-1 or CHD1L-shRNA-2 in A549 and PC9 cells. b Protein expression of CHD1L in vector, CHD1L-overexpressed (CHD1L) and A549/DDP cells. c Annexin-V-FITC/PI dual staining assay (left, representative plots for flow cytometry; right, bar charts indicating the average percentages of apoptotic cells). d WB assays (c-PARP, cleaved PARP; GAPDH, a loading control). e A549 cells stably transfected with shRNAs specifically targeting CHD1L or control shRNAs were labeled with GFP; meanwhile, the control parental cells were labeled with DsRed. GFP positive and DsRed positive cells were mixed together and subjected to cisplatin treatment (10μM) for 24-72 hours. f Fluorescent images of A549-shCTR-GFP and A549-shCHD1L-GFP cells mixed with A549-DsRed cells before and after cisplatin treatment. g Statistical analysis of flow cytometry data. NC, negative control siRNA; si1, si2, CHD1L siRNAs; Vec, empty vector transfected; CHD1L, CHD1L overexpression; n.s, normal saline. *P<0.05; **P<0.01; NS, no significance
Fig. 3Cisplatin resistance is associated with CHD1L activation. a A549 and PC9 cells displayed epithelial morphology, and A549/DDP and PC9/DDP cells exhibited fibroblastic morphology (original magnification, ×200). b Two DDP-resistant cells and their parental cells were treated with indicated concentrations of cisplatin for 48 h and then were subjected to CCK assay (n = 5). The results show that A549/DDP and PC9/DDP cells are more resistant to cisplatin than their parental cells in vitro. c qRT-PCR and Western blotting illustrate increased expression of CHD1L in A549/DDP and PC9/DDP cells. d Schema of step-wise cisplatin treatment on PC9 cells; CHD1L expression during cisplatin treatment was measured using western blotting. Statistics were generated from three independent experiments. *P<0.05, **P<0.01, ***P<0.001, Student’s t-test; error bar: ±S.D
Fig. 4CHD1L suppresses cisplatin-induced apoptosis in cisplatin-resistance cells. a Western blotting reveals that CHD1L was efficiently knocked down by the treatment of CHD1L-shRNA-1 or CHD1L-shRNA-2 in A549/DDP and PC9/DDP cells. b A549/DDP and PC9/DDP cells were transfected with CHD1L-shRNA-1 or CHD1L-shRNA-2 and seeded in 96-well cell culture plates. The next day, cells were incubated with or without the indicated concentration of cisplatin for 48 h and subsequently subjected to a CCK assay. c WB assays (c-PARP, cleaved PARP) d Annexin-V-FITC/PI dual staining assay (left, representative plots for flow cytometry; right, bar charts indicating the average percentages of apoptotic cells). NC, negative control siRNA; si1, si2, CHD1L siRNAs; n.s, normal saline. *P<0.05; **P<0.01; NS, no significance
Fig. 5Depletion of CHD1L expression enhances the sensitivity of xenograft tumors to cisplatin. a A549/DDP cells transfected with CHD1L-shRNA-1 or CHD1L-shRNA-2 were treated with cisplatin at the indicated concentration for 14 days. Colonies were stained with crystal violet (Left). The number of colonies were taken from three independent experiments (Right). b CHD1L knockdown reverses cisplatin resistance of cisplatin-resistant cells in xenograft tumors implanted onto adult female nude mice. A549/DDP cells transfected with CHD1L-shRNA-1 or CHD1L-shRNA-2 were subcutaneously injected to generate xenograft tumors in nude mice; cisplatin treatment was performed as described in Materials and Methods. Normal saline (n.s.) was used as a treatment control. Images of xenograft tumors harvested at the end of the experiment. c Growth curves of tumor xenografts. d The weights of tumors are presented as a Cleveland dot plot, and the average ±S.D is included (n=6/group; **P< 0.01; ***P <0.001; NS, no significance)
Fig. 6ABCB1 is responsible for CHD1L-induced NSCLC cell cisplatin resistance. a Five genes, ABCB1, CYP2C19, SULT1E1, ERCC3, and GSTP1 were found to have at least a 2-fold mRNA differential expression in A549-CHD1L cells compared to that in A549-vec using Cancer Drug Resistance RT 2 Profiler™ PCR Array. b Expression of ABCB1, CYP2C19, SULT1E1, ERCC3, and GSTP1 verified in A549-CHD1L and respective control by western blot. c Overexpression of CHD1L and ABCB1 was examined by immunohistochemistry in NSCLC tissues; scale bar, 10 μm, original magnification, ×200. d Silencing of ABCB1 in combination with cisplatin caused a marked inhibition of proliferation in A549-CHD1L cells. e Annexin-V-FITC/PI dual staining assay show that the enhanced cisplatin-resistance ability in A549-CHD1L cells was inhibited by silencing of ABCB1. f Western blot analysis showed that the cisplatin induced γ-H2AX over-expression could be rescued by silencing ABCB1 in CHD1L-overexpressing NSCLC cells. g Images of xenograft tumors harvested at the end of the experiment. h Growth curves of tumor xenografts. i The weights of tumors are presented as a Cleveland dot plot, and the average± S.D. is included (n=6/group; **P<0.01; ***P<0.001; NS, no significance)
List of genes differentially expressed in A549 cells after CHD1L overexpression using a Cancer Drug Resistance Real-time PCR Array
| Gene | Fold change | Location | Function |
|---|---|---|---|
| Upregulated genes | |||
|
| +3.63 | 7q21.12 | Decreases drug accumulation |
|
| +1.25 | 16p13.11 | Involves in multi-drug resistance |
|
| +1.00 | 10q24.2 | Involves in multi-drug resistance |
|
| +1.02 | 17q21.33 | Involves in multi-drug resistance |
|
| +1.01 | 3q27.1 | Provides resistance to thiopurine anticancer drugs |
|
| +1.69 | 4q22.1 | Responses to mitoxantrone and anthracycline exposure |
|
| +1.16 | 7p22.1 | Involves in cell motility, structure, integrity, and intercellular signaling |
|
| +1.45 | 7p21.1 | Regulate xenobiotic-metabolizing enzymes |
|
| +2.03 | Xq12 | Encode polyglutamine and polyglycine tracts |
|
| +1.01 | 11q22.3 | Cell response to DNA damage |
|
| +1.14 | 15q21.1 | Association with the MHC |
|
| +1.14 | 20q11.21 | Apoptotic inhibitor |
|
| +1.02 | 17q11.2 | Metabolic inactivation |
|
| +1.13 | 17q21.31 | Maintains genomic stability |
|
| +1.62 | 13q13.1 | Involves in maintenance of genome stability |
|
| +1.12 | 11q13.3 | Required for cell cycle G1/S transition |
|
| +1.13 | 19q12 | Required for cell cycle G1/S transition |
|
| +1.29 | 12q13.2 | Regulates progression through the cell cycle |
|
| +1.02 | 12q14.1 | Regulates progression through the cell cycle |
|
| +1.67 | 5p15.33 | Increases susceptibility to cancers |
|
| +2.24 | 10q23.33 | Variable ability to metabolize mephenytoin |
|
| +1.53 | 10q23.33 | Anticonvulsive drug mephenytoin |
|
| +2.02 | 10q26.3 | Involves in drug metabolism |
|
| +1.46 | 18q21.1 | Involves in drug metabolism |
|
| +1.00 | 5q14.1 | Identified on separate chromosomes |
|
| +1.10 | 7p11.2 | Promotes cell proliferation |
|
| +1.25 | Xp11.23 | Promotes cell proliferation |
|
| +1.07 | 6q25.1-q25.2 | A ligand-activated transcription |
|
| +1.49 | 14q23.2-q23.3 | Inhibits cell proliferation |
|
| +1.27 | 4q28.1 | Nervous system development, wound healing, and tumor growth |
|
| +1.26 | 14q24.3 | Cell proliferation and transformation |
|
| +1.02 | 11q13.2 | Reduces glutathione and detoxification |
|
| +1.05 | Xq26.2-q26.3 | Plays a central role in the generation of purine nucleotides |
|
| +1.40 | 7q31.2 | Induces dimerization and activation of the receptor, |
|
| +1.18 | 2p21-p16.3 | Consistent with the characteristic alterations |
|
| +1.31 | 8q24.21 | Participates in cell cycle progression, apoptosis and cellular transformation |
|
| +1.19 | 8p22. | Associated with higher incidences of cancer and drug toxicity |
|
| +1.03 | 10q24.32 | Involves in inflammation and immune function |
|
| +1.27 | 22q13.31 | Promotes proliferation |
|
| +1.74 | 3p25.2 | A regulator of adipocyte differentiation |
|
| +1.64 | 3p24.2 | Mediates signaling in cell growth and differentiation |
|
| +2.11 | 4q13.3 | Controls levels of estrogen receptors |
|
| +1.00 | 18q21.33 | Promotes proliferation |
|
| +1.41 | 9q31.3 | The core structure of many glycosphingolipids |
| Downregulated genes | |||
|
| −1.00 | 9q22.33 | Plays a central role in nucleotide excision repair |
|
| −1.27 | 16p13.11 | Involves in multi-drug resistance |
|
| −1.09 | 7q22.1 | Involves in endocytosis and Golgi processing |
|
| −1.19 | 5q22.2 | Cell migration and adhesion |
|
| −1.05 | 1q21.3 | Involves in xenobiotic metabolism |
|
| −1.43 | 19q13.33 | Involves in P53-mediated apoptosis |
|
| −1.14 | 18q21.33 | In multiple transcript variants |
|
| −1.10 | 6p21.2 | Interact with proliferating cell nuclear antigen, |
|
| −1.15 | 12p13.1 | Controls the cell cycle progression |
|
| −1.13 | 9p21.3 | Inhibits proliferation |
|
| −1.09 | 19p13.2 | Participates in proliferation |
|
| −1.13 | 15q24.1 | Involves in drug metabolism |
|
| −1.02 | 15q24.1 | Involves in drug metabolism |
|
| −1.02 | 19q13.2 | Involves in drug metabolism |
|
| −1.23 | 10q23.33 | Involves in drug metabolism |
|
| −1.06 | 22q13.2 | Involves in drug metabolism |
|
| −1.04 | 7q22.1 | Involves in drug metabolism |
|
| −1.25 | 1q42.12 | Activation and detoxification of epoxides |
|
| −1.27 | 17q12 | Promotes cell proliferation |
|
| −1.30 | 12q13.2 | Promotes cell proliferation |
|
| −1.23 | 2q34 | Promotes cell proliferation |
|
| −2.10 | 2q14.3 | Nucleotide excision repair |
|
| −1.08 | Xq26.2-q26.3 | Identified as a moonlighting protein |
|
| −1.07 | 19q13.2 | Regulates glycogen synthase and transcription factors |
|
| −2.86 | 11q13.2 | Reduces glutathione and detoxification |
|
| −1.24 | 14q23.2 | Involves in energy metabolism, angiogenesis, apoptosis |
|
| −1.21 | 15q26.3 | Enhances cell survival |
|
| −1.12 | 6q25.3 | Enhances cell survival |
|
| −1.47 | 16p11.2 | Participates in multiple cellular processes |
|
| −1.02 | 4q24 | Leads to cell development or delayed cell growth |
|
| −1.07 | 19q13.2 | A transcription factor |
|
| −1.09 | 6p21.1 | Promotes proliferation |
|
| −1.89 | 6p21.31 | Inhibits the ligand-induced transcriptional activity |
|
| −2.78 | 17q21.2 | Implicated in regulation of development, differentiation, apoptosis |
|
| −1.23 | 12q13.13 | Involves in various biological processes |
|
| −1.40 | 13q14.2 | A negative regulator of the cell cycle |
|
| −1.02 | 19q13.32 | Activation in anti-inflammatory decidual endothelial cells |
|
| −1.27 | 12q24.23 | The functional equivalent of the |
|
| −1.71 | 9q34.2 | Mediates the biological effects of retinoids |
|
| −1.19 | 6p21.32 | Increases DNA binding |
|
| −1.10 | 21q22.11 | A homodimer to convert naturally occuring |
|
| −1.28 | 20q12 | Controls the topologic states of DNA during transcription. |
|
| −1.11 | 17q21.2 | Controls the topologic states of DNA during transcription. |
|
| −1.32 | 3p24.2 | Controls the topologic states of DNA during transcription. |
|
| −1.08 | 17p13.1 | Participates in cell cycle arrest, apoptosis, senescence, DNA repair |
|
| −1.19 | 6p22.3 | Correlated with variations in sensitivity and toxicity |
|
| −1.02 | 3p25.1 | Plays an important role in the early steps of global genome nucleotide excision repair |
Fig. 7ABCB1 upregulation by CHD1L was partly dependent on c-Jun. a Western blot analysis showed that both c-Jun and ABCB1 were increased by enforced CHD1L expression in A549 cells. b Dual luciferase reporter assays show that the increased transcriptional activity and expression levels of ABCB1 by CHD1L were largely blocked after silencing c-Jun in CHD1L-overexpressing NSCLC cells. c The effects on the expression of CHD1L, phosphorylated p65 and phosphorylation of IκBα were analyzed by western blot. Scramble siRNA (siNC) was used as control. d ABCB1 expression and NF-κb activation during cisplatin as depicted in panel. e Schematic diagram depicting a proposed model for a major mechanism of CHD1L and its upregulation in the promotion of NSCLC cell cisplatin-resistance