| Literature DB >> 33428809 |
Nan Zhang1, Shaoqin Zhang1, Wenda Wu1, Wenxian Lu1, Mingting Jiang1, Ning Zheng2, Jing Huang1, Long Wang1, Hekun Liu1, Min Zheng1, Jichuang Wang1.
Abstract
Regorafenib is approved for patients with unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) following sorafenib. However, the effect of regorafenib on HCC metastasis and its mechanism are poorly understood. Here, our data showed that regorafenib significantly restrained the migration, invasion and vasculogenic mimicry (VM) of HCC cells, and downregulated the expression of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT)/VM-related molecules. Using RNA-seq and cellular thermal shift assays, we found that inhibitor of differentiation 1 (ID1) was a key target of regorafenib. In HCC tissues, the protein expression of ID1 was positively correlated with EMT and VM formation (CD34- /PAS+ ). Functionally, ID1 knockdown inhibited HCC cell migration, invasion, metastasis, and VM formation in vitro and in vivo, with upregulation of E-cadherin and downregulation of Snail and VE-cadherin. Moreover, Snail overexpression promoted the migration, invasion, and VM formation of ID1 knockdown cells. Snail knockdown reduced the migration, invasion, and VM formation of ID1 overexpression cells. Finally, regorafenib suppressed VM formation and decreased the expression of ID1, VE-cadherin and Snail in HCC PDX model. In conclusion, we manifested that regorafenib distinctly inhibited EMT in HCC cells via targeting ID1, leading to the suppression of cell migration, invasion and VM formation. These findings suggest that regorafenib may be developed as a suitable therapeutic agent for HCC metastasis.Entities:
Keywords: ID1-mediated EMT; hepatocellular carcinoma; migration and invasion; regorafenib; vasculogenic mimicry
Year: 2021 PMID: 33428809 DOI: 10.1002/mc.23279
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Carcinog ISSN: 0899-1987 Impact factor: 4.784