| Literature DB >> 34094664 |
Xueke Qian1, Hongbo Qu2, Fan Zhang3, Shujia Peng4, Dongwei Dou1, Yunqing Yang1, Yichao Ding3, Mingwei Xie3, Huaying Dong3, Yue Liao3,5, Mingli Han1.
Abstract
Trastuzumab has been widely used for treatment of HER-2-positive breast cancer patients, however, the clinical response has been restricted due to emergence of resistance. Recent studies indicate that long noncoding RNA AGAP2-AS1 (lncRNA AGAP2-AS1) plays an important role in cancer resistance. However, the precise regulatory function and therapeutic potential of AGAP2-AS1 in trastuzumab resistance is still not defined. In this study, we sought to reveal the essential role of AGAP2-AS1 in trastuzumab resistance. Our results suggest that AGAP2-AS1 disseminates trastuzumab resistance via packaging into exosomes. Exosomal AGAP2-AS1 induces trastuzumab resistance via modulating ATG10 expression and autophagy activity. Mechanically, AGAP2-AS1 is associated with ELAVL1 protein, and the AGAP2-AS1-ELAVL1 complex could directly bind to the promoter region of ATG10, inducing H3K27ac and H3K4me3 enrichment, which finally activates ATG10 transcription. AGAP2-AS1-targeting antisense oligonucleotides (ASO) substantially increased trastuzumab-induced cytotoxicity. Clinically, increased expression of serum exosomal AGAP2-AS1 was associate with poor response to trastuzumab treatment. In conclusion, exosomal AGAP2-AS1 increased trastuzumab resistance via promoting ATG10 expression and inducing autophagy. Therefore, AGAP2-AS1 may serve as predictive biomarker and therapeutic target for HER-2+ breast cancer patients. AJCREntities:
Keywords: AGAP2-AS1; ATG10; Breast cancer; ELAVL1; trastuzumab resistance
Year: 2021 PMID: 34094664 PMCID: PMC8167703
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Cancer Res ISSN: 2156-6976 Impact factor: 6.166