Literature DB >> 32009798

EZH2 Contributes To Cisplatin Resistance In Breast Cancer By Epigenetically Suppressing miR-381 Expression.

Dongwei Dou1, Xin Ge1, Xinxing Wang1, Xiaodong Xu1, Zhe Zhang1, Jingjing Seng1, Zhang Cao1, Yuanting Gu1, Mingli Han1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Emerging evidence reveals the vital role of enhancer of zeste homolog 2 (EZH2) in cancer chemoresistance. However, its function and molecular mechanisms in breast cancer chemoresistance remain largely unknown.
METHODS: Gene expression was evaluated using quantitative real-time PCR (qRT-PCR) and Western blot analysis. The functional roles of EZH2 and miR-381 in breast cancer were explored using cell MTT assay and flow cytometry analysis. The effect of EZH2 on miR-381 expression in transcriptional level was determined using Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assay and Luciferase reporter assay.
RESULTS: In this study, we found that EZH2 was up-regulated in CDDP-resistant breast cancer tissues and cell lines. Breast cancer patients with high EZH2 expression had a poor prognosis. EZH2 silencing improved the sensitivity of MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells towards CDDP. Moreover, EZH2 could epigenetically silence miR-381. miR-381 overexpression could overcome CDDP resistance in CDDP-resistant breast cancer cells. miR-381 knockdown weakened the inductive effect of EZH2 silencing on CDDP sensitivity of MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells. Furthermore, EZH2 knockdown facilitated CDDP sensitivity of CDDP-resistant breast cancer cells in vivo.
CONCLUSIONS: Collectively, EZH2 depletion overcame CDDP resistance of breast cancer through epigenetically silencing miR-381, providing a novel therapeutic target for breast cancer chemoresistance.
© 2019 Dou et al.

Entities:  

Keywords:  CDDP; breast cancer; enhancer of zeste homolog 2; miR-381

Year:  2019        PMID: 32009798      PMCID: PMC6859472          DOI: 10.2147/OTT.S214104

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Onco Targets Ther        ISSN: 1178-6930            Impact factor:   4.147


Introduction

Breast cancer is a most common malignancy in women worldwide and a major serious health threat to women.1 Even though impressive improvements have been acquired in diagnosis and therapy of breast cancer during the past decade, prognosis for advanced breast cancer remains relatively poor.2 Platinum-based chemotherapy is a significant therapeutic strategy for breast cancer patients.3 Nevertheless, chemoresistance frequently occurs during chemotherapy, which is a crucial barrier to the efficacy of chemotherapy drugs for cancers, including breast cancer.4,5 Consequently, to sequentially elucidate the underlying mechanism and discover new therapeutic targets are essential for developing effective therapies for breast cancer patients. Enhancer of zeste homolog 2 (EZH2), a histone methyltransferase, is a vital catalytic subunit of polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2) epigenetically suppressing gene expression through the enhancement of histone H3 lysine 27 trimethylation (H3K27me3).6,7 EZH2 was aberrantly up-regulated in various cancers, and was closely linked to the tumor progression, metastasis and poor prognosis.8–10 Moreover, EZH2 expression was remarkably increased in breast cancer cells and contributed to breast cancer progression.11,12 Despite the involvement of EZH2 in cancer progression extensively characterized, the role of EZH2 in acquired drug resistance remains elusive. Therefore, to investigate whether EZH2 inhibition will hold promise in the treatment of resistant cancers is urgent. miRNAs are a class of small, non-coding RNA with about 22 nucleotides in length, which contribute to their target genes’ inhibition, through mRNA degradation or translation inhibition.13,14 MiRNAs are recently implicated by more and more reports as critical determinants that are involved in various cellular processes, including chemoresistance and tumorigenesis.15 MiRNAs’ aberrant expression has been regarded as a powerful regulator of CDDP resistance. For instance, miR-34a has been discovered to be down-regulated and contributed to CDDP resistance in CDDP-resistant prostate cancer cells.16 miR-381 was reported to be decreased in breast cancer, and miR-381 overexpression suppressed breast cancer cell proliferation, epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition and metastasis through targeting CXCR4.17 Additionally, miR-381 could re-sensitize CDDP-resistant non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cells towards cisplatin through inactivating nuclear factor-κB signaling.18 Moreover, miR-381 enhanced doxorubicin sensitivity of breast cancer cells through inactivation of MAPK signaling via targeting FYN.19 Recently, miR-381 was reported to overcome CDDP sensitivity in breast cancer through targeting MDR1.20 All these studies suggested that miR-381 was closely implicated with cancer chemoresistance. However, how miR-381 was regulated in breast cancer is still largely unknown. In this study, we aimed to investigate the expression pattern and functional role of EZH2 in breast cancer CDDP resistance. Our results discovered that EZH2 expression was up-regulated in CDDP-resistant breast cancer tissues and cells. Functionally, EZH2 silencing improved the response of CDDP-resistant breast cancer cells toward CDDP. Mechanically, EZH2 knockdown facilitated the sensitivity of breast cancer cells towards CDDP through epigenetic suppression of miR-381 expression. Our work demonstrated a novel EZH2/miR-381 regulatory axis, overcoming CDDP resistance in breast cancer.

Materials And Methods

Tumor Tissue Samples And Cells

The paired tumor tissues (n=48) and adjacent normal tissues (n=48) were obtained from breast cancer patients who underwent surgery at the First Affiliated Hospital of Zhengzhou University. All patients were treated with CDDP and divided into two groups: CDDP-sensitive (relieved completely or partially) and CDDP-resistant (stable or deteriorating) patients. The informed consent has been signed by all patients before the study, which was approved by the ethics committee of the First Affiliated Hospital of Zhengzhou University. Normalized RNA-seq data of Breast adenocarcinoma (BRCA) were downloaded from the TCGA data portal website (). Human breast cancer cell lines (MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231) and human normal breast epithelial cell line MCF-10A were derived from ATCC (Manassas, VA, USA). CDDP-resistant cell lines (MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP) were chosen from MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 cells after continuous exposure to stepwise increasing concentrations of DDP for 12 months. All cells were grown in RPMI-1640 medium (Gibco BRL, Grand Island, NY, USA) supplemented with 10% FBS at 37°C with 5% CO2.

Cell Transfection

Mimic control (miR-con), miR-381 mimic (miR-381) and miR-381 inhibitor (anti-miR-381) were purchased from Sangon Biotech (Shanghai, China). The empty pcDNA3.1 vector (Vector) or EZH2 overexpressing vector pcDNA3.1-EZH2 (EZH2) and small interfering RNA against EZH2 (si-EZH2) and its negative control (si-con) were designed and synthesized by Genepharma (China). Lipofectamine 2000 (Invitrogen) was used for cell transfections.

Quantitative Real-Time PCR (qRT-PCR)

Total RNA extraction was carried out through using Trizol reagent (TaKaRa, Tokyo, Japan). Then, the RNA was reverse transcripted to cDNA using PrimeScript RT Reagent Kit (TaKaRa). The qRT-PCR was carried out using SYBR green qRT-PCR assay. GAPDH and U6 were used for internal controls for EZH2 and miR-381, respectively. The data were analyzed using the 2−ΔΔCt method.

Western Blot Analysis

Equivalent amounts of protein samples were separated by 12% sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and then transferred to polypropylene difluoride membranes. After 1 hr of blockade with 5% non-fat dry milk, membranes were immunoblotted overnight at 4°C with the special primary antibody against EZH2 (BD Biosciences, San Jose, CA, USA), followed by incubation with appropriate horseradish peroxidase-conjugated secondary antibodies (Boster, Wuhan, China) for 1 hr at room temperature. Visualization of bands was performed according to the ECL kit (Beyotime, Shanghai, China).

CDDP Sensitivity Assay

The sensitivity of breast cancer cells was evaluated by MTT assay. CDDP sensitivity was determined using the IC50 value (half maximal inhibitory concentration). GraphPad Prism 7.0 Software was used to calculate the IC50 value.

Flow Cytometric Analysis

Cell apoptosis was identified using Annexin V-FITC/PI apoptosis detection kit (MultiScience Biotech, Hangzhou, China) as described previously.21

Chromatin Immunoprecipitation (ChiP) Assays

ChIP assay was conducted using EZ ChIP™ Chromatin Immunoprecipitation Kit (Millipore, Bedford, MA) with anti-EZH2 (Abcam, Cambridge, MA, USA), anti-H3K27me3 (Millipore) or anti-IgG (Millipore) antibodies. Precipitated DNA was tested by qPCR.

Luciferase Reporter Assay

The miR-381 promoter reporter vector was purchased from Genechem (China). Then, MCF-7/CDDP cells were co-transfected with (EZH2 or Vector) or (si-EZH2 or si-con) and the reporter promoter. Finally, luciferase activity in MCF-7/CDDP cells was measured using Luciferase Reporter assay system (Promega, Madison, WI, USA).

Animal Experiments

The animal experiments were performed in strict accordance with the guiding principles of the institutional animal ethics committee and approved by the institutional research committee of the First Affiliated Hospital of Zhengzhou University. MCF-7/CDDP cells stably expressing sh-EZH2 were transplanted into six-week-old BALB/c nude mice (5 mice/group) from Slac Laboratory (Shanghai, China), and then mice were injected intraperitoneally with 5 mg/kg CDDP or a same volume of PBS every seven days. Every seven days, tumor sizes were monitored and calculated using the formula: volume = 0.5 × length × width2. Mice were euthanized at 35th day post-injection and tumors were excised and weighed.

Statistical Analysis

All data were evaluated as means ± standard deviation (SD). Student’s t-test and one-way ANOVA were used to calculate the statistic difference. P value <0.05 was considered statistically significant.

Results

EZH2 Was Up-Regulated In CDDP-Resistant Breast Cancer Tissues And Cell Lines

To investigate the role of EZH2 in breast cancer, we firstly studied the expression of EZH2 in breast cancer tissues from TCGA databases. Compared with normal tissues, EZH2 expression was remarkably up-regulated in breast cancer tumor tissues (Figure 1A). To verify the result from TCGA databases, EZH2 expression in breast cancer tumor tissues (n=48) and adjacent normal tissues (n=48) was further determined by qRT-PCR analysis. Consistently, EZH2 expression was higher in breast cancer tissues than that in adjacent normal tissues (Figure 1B). Moreover, compared with CDDP-sensitive breast cancer tissues, EZH2 expression was extremely increased in CDDP-resistant breast cancer tissues (Figure 1C). Furthermore, the expression of EZH2 was significantly enhanced in MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 cells compared with normal MCF-10A cells (Figure 1D and E). Notably, compared with their parental cells, MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells showed high EZH2 expression level (Figure 1D and E). Moreover, the breast cancer patients with high EZH2 level had a poor prognosis (P = 0.0165) (Figure 1F). Collectively, these data seemed to suggest that up-regulated EZH2 may be implicated with CDDP resistance in breast cancer.
Figure 1

EZH2 was up-regulated in CDDP-resistant breast cancer tissues and cell lines. qRT-PCR analysis indicated the EZH2 expression levels in breast cancer tumor or normal tissues from TCGA dataset (A), paired breast cancer tumor (n=48) or adjacent normal (n=48) tissues (B), CDDP-sensitive or CDDP-resistant breast cancer tissues (C), and CDDP-resistant breast cancer cell lines (MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP) and their parental cells (MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231) or human normal breast epithelial cell line MCF-10A (D and E). (F) The overall survival was evaluated by Kaplan–Meier curve between low and high EZH2 expression groups. *P < 0.05; **P<0.01; ***P<0.001.

EZH2 was up-regulated in CDDP-resistant breast cancer tissues and cell lines. qRT-PCR analysis indicated the EZH2 expression levels in breast cancer tumor or normal tissues from TCGA dataset (A), paired breast cancer tumor (n=48) or adjacent normal (n=48) tissues (B), CDDP-sensitive or CDDP-resistant breast cancer tissues (C), and CDDP-resistant breast cancer cell lines (MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP) and their parental cells (MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231) or human normal breast epithelial cell line MCF-10A (D and E). (F) The overall survival was evaluated by Kaplan–Meier curve between low and high EZH2 expression groups. *P < 0.05; **P<0.01; ***P<0.001.

EZH2 Knockdown Overcame CDDP Resistance Of Breast Cancer Cells

To evaluate the resistance of MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells to CDDP, IC50 of CDDP was measured by MTT assay in CDDP-resistant MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells and parental MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 cells. Compare to MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 cells, MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells displayed poor response to CDDP (Figure 2A). To further confirm the role of EZH2 in CDDP-resistant breast cancer cells, MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells were transfected with EZH2 siRNAs (si-EZH2 #1, si-EZH2 #2 or si-EZH2 #3) or si-con. qRT-PCR analysis indicated that the introduction of EZH2 siRNAs evidently weakened EZH2 expression in MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells (Figure 2B), especially in si-EZH2 #2 treated group. Therefore, si-EZH2 #2 (si-EZH2) was employed to further experiments. Dramatically, EZH2-silencing suppressed the cell viability and enhanced CDDP sensitivity in MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells (Figure 2C and D). To further determine the role of EZH2 in CDDP-induced apoptosis, flow cytometry analysis was undertaken in MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells with 10 μM CDDP exposure. As expected, EZH2 knockdown strangely enhanced CDDP-induced apoptosis in MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells (Figure 2E and F). Collectively, EZH2 knockdown facilitated CDDP sensitivity in breast cancer cells.
Figure 2

Knockdown of EZH2 overcame CDDP resistance of breast cancer cells. (A) The cell viability was determined by MTT assay in MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells and their parental cells exposed to different concentrations of CDDP (0.1, 1, 5, 10, 25, 50, 100 μM) for 48 hrs. (B) qRT-PCR analysis was performed in MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells transfected with EZH2 siRNAs (si-EZH2 #1, si-EZH2 #2 or si-EZH2 #3) or si-con. (C) The cell viability was determined by MTT assay in MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells transfected with si-EZH2 or si-con (D) MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells transfected with si-EZH2 or si-con were treated with various concentrations of CDDP (0.1, 1, 5, 10, 25, 50, 100 μM) for 48 hrs and cell viability was evaluated by MTT assay. (E and F) Cell apoptosis was determined by flow cytometry analysis in si-EZH2 or si-con transfected MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells after treatment with 10 μM of CDDP. *P < 0.05.

Knockdown of EZH2 overcame CDDP resistance of breast cancer cells. (A) The cell viability was determined by MTT assay in MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells and their parental cells exposed to different concentrations of CDDP (0.1, 1, 5, 10, 25, 50, 100 μM) for 48 hrs. (B) qRT-PCR analysis was performed in MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells transfected with EZH2 siRNAs (si-EZH2 #1, si-EZH2 #2 or si-EZH2 #3) or si-con. (C) The cell viability was determined by MTT assay in MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells transfected with si-EZH2 or si-con (D) MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells transfected with si-EZH2 or si-con were treated with various concentrations of CDDP (0.1, 1, 5, 10, 25, 50, 100 μM) for 48 hrs and cell viability was evaluated by MTT assay. (E and F) Cell apoptosis was determined by flow cytometry analysis in si-EZH2 or si-con transfected MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells after treatment with 10 μM of CDDP. *P < 0.05.

EZH2 Epigenetically Suppressed miR-381 Expression In Breast Cancer Cells

Previous studies demonstrated that EZH2 could contribute to transcriptional inhibition of miRNAs through increasing H3K27me3 on their promoter region.22,23 Moreover, Chipbase database () prediction indicated that EZH2 could bind with miR-381, which was identified to be down-regulated in cancers attributed to DNA hypermethylation.24 Hence, whether EZH2 contributed to epigenetic suppression of miR-381 in CDDP-resistant breast cancer cells was further investigated. Firstly, the correlation between EZH2 and miR-381 in 1185 breast cancer tissue samples from TCGA databases was analyzed using Chipbase database. The results indicated that there was a negative correction between EZH2 and miR-381 expression in breast cancer tissue samples (Figure 3A). EZH2 knockdown evidently increased miR-381 expression in MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells (Figure 3B). Moreover, EZH2-silencing considerably elevated precursor miR-381 expression in MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells ( and ). To further confirm that miR-381 is transcriptionally repressed by EZH2 in our breast cancer cells, ChIP assays were conducted to detect the enrichment of EZH2 and the H3K27me3 on the miR-381 promoter. The results disclosed that EZH2 knockdown remarkedly weakened the enrichment of EZH2 and H3K27me3 on the miR-381 promoter in MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells (Figure 3C and D). Also, luciferase reporter assay showed that EZH2 inhibition improved the activity of miR-381 promoter, oppositely, up-regulation of EZH2 suppressed the promoter activity (Figure 3E and F). All these data suggested that EZH2 epigenetically suppressed miR-381 expression in breast cancer cells.
Figure 3

EZH2 directly inhibited miR-381 expression in breast cancer cells. (A) Correlation analysis between EZH2 and miR-381 in 1185 tumor tissue samples of breast cancer from TCGA datasets. (B) miR-381 expression levels in MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells transfected with si-con or si-EZH2. (C and D) ChIP followed by qPCR analysis was performed to evaluate the enrichment of EZH2 and H3K27me3 on the miR-381 promoter in MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells. (E and F) Luciferase reporter assay evaluated the miR-381 promoter activity in MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells transfected with (si-EZH2 or si-con) or (EZH2 or Vector). *P < 0.05.

EZH2 directly inhibited miR-381 expression in breast cancer cells. (A) Correlation analysis between EZH2 and miR-381 in 1185 tumor tissue samples of breast cancer from TCGA datasets. (B) miR-381 expression levels in MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells transfected with si-con or si-EZH2. (C and D) ChIP followed by qPCR analysis was performed to evaluate the enrichment of EZH2 and H3K27me3 on the miR-381 promoter in MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells. (E and F) Luciferase reporter assay evaluated the miR-381 promoter activity in MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells transfected with (si-EZH2 or si-con) or (EZH2 or Vector). *P < 0.05.

miR-381 Overexpression Enhanced CDDP Sensitivity Of Breast Cancer Cells

To further study the effect of miR-381 on CDDP-resistant breast cancer cells, MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells were transfected with miR-381 mimics or miR-con. qRT-PCR analysis revealed that miR-381 expression was remarkably increased in miR-381 transfecting MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells (Figure 4A and B). Moreover, miR-381 overexpression improved the sensitivity of MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells to CDDP (Figure 4C and D). To further determine the effect of miR-381 on CDDP-induced apoptosis, flow cytometry analysis was performed in MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells exposed to 10 μM CDDP. As expected, miR-381 overexpression strangely enhanced CDDP-induced apoptosis in MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells (Figure 4E and F). Together, elevated EZH2 improved CDDP sensitivity in breast cancer cells.
Figure 4

Overexpression of miR-381 improved CDDP resistance of breast cancer cells. MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells were transfected with miR-con (scramble control) or miR-381, followed by determination of miR-381 expression by qRT-PCR analysis (A and B), IC50 of CDDP by MTT assay (C and D), and cell apoptotic rate by flow cytometry analysis (E and F). *P < 0.05.

Overexpression of miR-381 improved CDDP resistance of breast cancer cells. MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells were transfected with miR-con (scramble control) or miR-381, followed by determination of miR-381 expression by qRT-PCR analysis (A and B), IC50 of CDDP by MTT assay (C and D), and cell apoptotic rate by flow cytometry analysis (E and F). *P < 0.05.

EZH2 knockdown facilitated CDDP sensitivity of breast cancer cells through increasing miR-381 expression

To further investigate whether EZH2 exerted its functional role in breast cancer CDDP resistance through regulating miR-381 expression, MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells were transfected with si-con, si-EZH2, si-EZH2+anti-miR-con or si-EZH2+anti-miR-381. Transfection of si-EZH2 up-regulated miR-381 expression in MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells, which was extremely reversed by miR-381 inhibition (Figure 5A and B). MTT assay revealed that down-regulation of EZH2 facilitated CDDP sensitivity of MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells, nevertheless, the inductive effect of EZH2 inhibition on CDDP sensitivity of MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells was patently abolished by miR-381 down-regulation (Figure 5C and D). Furthermore, introduction of anti-miR-381 extremely demolished the inductive effect of silenced EZH2 on apoptosis in MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells (Figure 5E and F). Collectively, these results suggested that EZH2 inhibition contributed to CDDP resistance of breast cancer cells through epigenetically silencing miR-381.
Figure 5

miR-381 knockdown reversed the enhancive effect of down-regulated EZH2 on CDDP sensitivity of breast cancer cells. MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells were transfected with si-con, si-EZH2, si-EZH2+anti-miR-con or si-EZH2+anti-miR-381, followed by determination of miR-381 expression by qRT-PCR analysis (A and B), IC50 of CDDP by MTT assay (C and D), and cell apoptotic rate by flow cytometry analysis (E and F). *P < 0.05.

miR-381 knockdown reversed the enhancive effect of down-regulated EZH2 on CDDP sensitivity of breast cancer cells. MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells were transfected with si-con, si-EZH2, si-EZH2+anti-miR-con or si-EZH2+anti-miR-381, followed by determination of miR-381 expression by qRT-PCR analysis (A and B), IC50 of CDDP by MTT assay (C and D), and cell apoptotic rate by flow cytometry analysis (E and F). *P < 0.05.

EZH2 Knockdown Improves CDDP Sensitivity In Tumors In Vivo

To confirm whether EZH2 knockdown could possibly increase CDDP’s cytotoxic impact, a breast cancer mouse xenograft model was created. We made an sh-EZH2 stably expressing MCF-7/CDDP cell line and inoculated them subcutaneously into nude mice. Thenceforth, mice were injected intraperitoneally with PBS or CDDP, and tumor size was evaluated every 7 days. Xenograft tumors from EZH2-silencing MCF-7/CDDP cells grew evidently slower than tumors from sh-con-transfecting MCF-7/CDDP cells. CDDP treatment suppressed tumors’ growth from sh-con-transfecting MCF-7/CDDP cell. Furthermore, slower tumor growth was displayed in tumors from EZH2-silencing MCF-7/CDDP cells than that from sh-con-transfecting MCF-7/CDDP cells, following CDDP administration (Figure 6A). At the 35th day post-treatment, mice were euthanized and xenograft tumors were excised and weighed. In comparison with the sh-con + PBS group, the sh-con + CDDP group and the sh-EZH2 + PBS group displayed light tumor weight. Moreover, tumors from EZH2-silencing MCF-7/CDDP cells were lighter than that from sh-con-transfecting MCF-7/CDDP cells after CDDP treatment (Figure 6B). Besides, CDDP treatment or EZH2 knockdown inhibited EZH2 expression while up-regulated miR-381 expression, which was strengthened by the combination of EZH2 silencing and CDDP exposure (Figure 6C). All these data suggested that knockdown of EZH2 improved CDDP sensitivity in breast cancer cells in vivo.
Figure 6

EZH2 knockdown enhances CDDP sensitivity in tumors in vivo. (A) Tumor growth curves of xenograft tumors of mice inoculated with MCF-7/CDDP cells stably expressing sh-EZH2 or sh-con and treated with CDDP or PBS. (B) Images and weight analysis of xenograft tumors. (C) Expression levels of EZH2 and miR-381 in xenograft tumors were quantified by qRT-PCR. *P<0.05.

EZH2 knockdown enhances CDDP sensitivity in tumors in vivo. (A) Tumor growth curves of xenograft tumors of mice inoculated with MCF-7/CDDP cells stably expressing sh-EZH2 or sh-con and treated with CDDP or PBS. (B) Images and weight analysis of xenograft tumors. (C) Expression levels of EZH2 and miR-381 in xenograft tumors were quantified by qRT-PCR. *P<0.05.

Discussion

Therapeutic outcome has been restricted by chemoresistance severely for breast cancer patients. Consequently, to reveal the underlying mechanism and uncover novel therapeutic strategies for chemoresistance is not dispensable. In this work, we found that EZH2 expression was strikingly increased in CDDP-resistant breast cancer tissues and cells. Moreover, EZH2 knockdown re-sensitized CDDP-resistant MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells to CDDP. Prominently, EZH2 silencing heightened the response of breast cancer cells towards CDDP through epigenetically suppressing miR-381 expression. Therefore, EZH2 could contribute to breast cancer CDDP resistance and EZH2 inhibition may be an effective scheme for CDDP chemoresistance in breast cancer. Elucidating the molecular mechanism underlying CDDP resistance was helpful to discover reasonable and effective targeted therapeutic strategies to overwhelmed CDDP resistance. Our study found that EZH2 expression was raised in CDDP-resistant breast cancer tissues and cells, and EZH2-silencing enhanced the responder of CDDP-resistant breast cancer cells towards CDDP. In line with our findings, increasing evidence demonstrated that dysregulated EZH2 was implicated with CDDP resistance in various malignancies. For example, down-regulated EZH2 mediated by miR-124 could inhibit cell proliferation, induce cell apoptosis, and sensitize gastric cancer cells to CDDP.25 EZH2 was overexpressed in hepatocellular carcinoma cells, and EZH2 knockdown improved the sensitivity of Bel/CDDP cells to CDDP by inhibiting multidrug resistance protein 1(MDR1) expression.26,27 Moreover, EZH2 up-regulation led to CDDP resistance through inhibiting DPYD expression.28 Furthermore, down-regulation of EZH2 facilitated the sensitivity of A2780/DDP cells to cisplatin in epithelial ovarian cancer through suppressing BRCA1 expression.29 All these findings indicated that targeted inhibiting EZH2 maybe a hopeful therapeutic strategy for CDDP chemoresistance. How elevated EZH2 helps to CDDP resistance in breast cancer remains elusive. Hence, the operative mechanism of EZH2 was further explored in this work. Emerging evidence suggested that EZH2 transcriptionally inhibited the expression of miRNAs through increasing H3K27me3 on their promoter region.22,23 Moreover, miR-381 has been reported to be down-regulated in cancers attributed to DNA hypermethylation.15 However, whether EZH2 could regulate miR-381 expression at transcriptional level in breast cancer continued to be indescribable. In our study, Chipbase database prediction and ChIP and luciferase reporter assays verified that EZH2 could bind with miR-381 and transcriptionally suppress miR-381 expression in MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells. Mounting evidence has indicated that miR-381 played a tumor suppressor role in tumorigenesis.17,30–32 Moreover, down-regulated miR-381 was related to chemoresistance in many cancers.33–36 Especially, miR-381 overexpression could suppress proliferation, and metastasis in breast cancer cells through targetly suppressing CXCR4.37 Prominently, miR-381 could improve the response of non-small cell lung cancer cells to CDDP through the inactivation of nuclear factor-ĸB signaling.38 A recent study reported that miR-381 could overcome CDDP resistance in breast cancer through directly inhibiting MDR1.20 Correspondingly, our found indicated that miR-381 overexpression overcame CDDP resistance in MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP cells. Additionally, miR-381 inhibition reversed EZH2 knockdown-mediated enhancement of CDDP sensitivity in MCF-7/CDDP and MDA-MB-231/CDDP. All these data demonstrated that EZH2 inhibition re-sensitized CDDP-resistant breast cancer cells towards CDDP through epigenetically silencing miR-381 in breast cancer. In conclusion, our study demonstrated that EZH2 knockdown improved CDDP sensitivity of breast cancer cells through epigenetically silencing miR-381, providing a promising therapeutic target for breast cancer CDDP resistance.
  35 in total

Review 1.  The functions of E(Z)/EZH2-mediated methylation of lysine 27 in histone H3.

Authors:  Ru Cao; Yi Zhang
Journal:  Curr Opin Genet Dev       Date:  2004-04       Impact factor: 5.578

Review 2.  Making RISC.

Authors:  Tomoko Kawamata; Yukihide Tomari
Journal:  Trends Biochem Sci       Date:  2010-04-13       Impact factor: 13.807

3.  MicroRNA-124 inhibits proliferation and induces apoptosis by directly repressing EZH2 in gastric cancer.

Authors:  Liming Xie; Zhiwei Zhang; Zhiqin Tan; Rongfang He; Xi Zeng; Yuanjie Xie; Suyun Li; Guohua Tang; Hailin Tang; Xiusheng He
Journal:  Mol Cell Biochem       Date:  2014-07       Impact factor: 3.396

4.  Increased expression of the polycomb group gene, EZH2, in transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder.

Authors:  Jay D Raman; Nigel P Mongan; Satish K Tickoo; Stephen A Boorjian; Douglas S Scherr; Lorraine J Gudas
Journal:  Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2005-12-15       Impact factor: 12.531

5.  RNAi-mediated EZH2 depletion decreases MDR1 expression and sensitizes multidrug-resistant hepatocellular carcinoma cells to chemotherapy.

Authors:  Bo Tang; Yi Zhang; Rui Liang; Zhenming Gao; Deguang Sun; Liming Wang
Journal:  Oncol Rep       Date:  2013-01-04       Impact factor: 3.906

6.  microRNA-381 suppresses the growth and increases cisplatin sensitivity in non-small cell lung cancer cells through inhibition of nuclear factor-κB signaling.

Authors:  Ri-Sheng Huang; Yuan-Liang Zheng; Jun Zhao; Xu Chun
Journal:  Biomed Pharmacother       Date:  2017-12-27       Impact factor: 6.529

7.  Cancer statistics, 2016.

Authors:  Rebecca L Siegel; Kimberly D Miller; Ahmedin Jemal
Journal:  CA Cancer J Clin       Date:  2016-01-07       Impact factor: 508.702

8.  EZH2 promotes hepatocellular carcinoma progression through modulating miR-22/galectin-9 axis.

Authors:  Shaofei Chen; Jiarui Pu; Jie Bai; Yuping Yin; Ke Wu; Jiliang Wang; Xiaoming Shuai; Jinbo Gao; Kaixiong Tao; Guobin Wang; Hang Li
Journal:  J Exp Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2018-01-09

Review 9.  Surgical Management of Breast Cancer in Africa: A Continent-Wide Review of Intervention Practices, Barriers to Care, and Adjuvant Therapy.

Authors:  Stephanie A Sutter; Aaron Slinker; Deo Darius Balumuka; Katrina B Mitchell
Journal:  J Glob Oncol       Date:  2016-07-06

10.  miR-125b-1 is repressed by histone modifications in breast cancer cell lines.

Authors:  Fernanda Cisneros-Soberanis; Marco A Andonegui; Luis A Herrera
Journal:  Springerplus       Date:  2016-07-02
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  11 in total

1.  RETRACTED ARTICLE: The novel long non-coding RNA LATS2-AS1-001 inhibits gastric cancer progression by regulating the LATS2/YAP1 signaling pathway via binding to EZH2.

Authors:  Dan Sun; Ying Wang; Huan Wang; Yan Xin
Journal:  Cancer Cell Int       Date:  2020-05-29       Impact factor: 6.429

Review 2.  CDC7 as a novel biomarker and druggable target in cancer.

Authors:  Runze Liu; Yong Huang
Journal:  Clin Transl Oncol       Date:  2022-06-03       Impact factor: 3.340

3.  Full methylation of H3K27 by PRC2 is dispensable for initial embryoid body formation but required to maintain differentiated cell identity.

Authors:  Sara A Miller; Manashree Damle; Jongmin Kim; Robert E Kingston
Journal:  Development       Date:  2021-04-15       Impact factor: 6.868

4.  Role of microRNA-381 in bladder cancer growth and metastasis with the involvement of BMI1 and the Rho/ROCK axis.

Authors:  Dayin Chen; Liang Cheng; Huifeng Cao; Wensi Liu
Journal:  BMC Urol       Date:  2021-01-06       Impact factor: 2.264

5.  LncRNA SNHG1 promotes tumor progression and cisplatin resistance through epigenetically silencing miR-381 in breast cancer.

Authors:  Mingkun Zhang; Liu Yang; Lan Hou; Xueyuan Tang
Journal:  Bioengineered       Date:  2021-12       Impact factor: 3.269

6.  Enhancer of zeste homolog 2 promotes hepatocellular cancer progression and chemoresistance by enhancing protein kinase B activation through microRNA-381-mediated SET domain bifurcated 1.

Authors:  Jingyang Zhou; Jinhui Che; Lu Xu; Weizhong Yang; Yunmei Li; Wuyuan Zhou; Shubing Zou
Journal:  Bioengineered       Date:  2022-03       Impact factor: 3.269

Review 7.  MicroRNA-381 in human cancer: Its involvement in tumour biology and clinical applications potential.

Authors:  Huanhuan Sha; Yujie Gan; Feng Xu; Yue Zhu; Renrui Zou; Weiwei Peng; Zhiya Wu; Rong Ma; Jianzhong Wu; Jifeng Feng
Journal:  J Cell Mol Med       Date:  2022-01-11       Impact factor: 5.310

Review 8.  EZH2 Inhibition and Cisplatin as a Combination Anticancer Therapy: An Overview of Preclinical Studies.

Authors:  Ivana Samaržija; Marko Tomljanović; Renata Novak Kujundžić; Koraljka Gall Trošelj
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2022-09-29       Impact factor: 6.575

9.  The novel long non-coding RNA LATS2-AS1-001 inhibits gastric cancer progression by regulating the LATS2/YAP1 signaling pathway via binding to EZH2.

Authors:  Dan Sun; Ying Wang; Huan Wang; Yan Xin
Journal:  Cancer Cell Int       Date:  2020-05-29       Impact factor: 5.722

10.  miR-381-3p suppresses breast cancer progression by inhibition of epithelial-mesenchymal transition.

Authors:  Yong-Zheng Yu; Qiang Mu; Qian Ren; Li-Juan Xie; Qi-Tang Wang; Cui-Ping Wang
Journal:  World J Surg Oncol       Date:  2021-08-06       Impact factor: 2.754

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