| Literature DB >> 36099882 |
Manli Wang1, Xuelan Chen2, Ping Tan1, Yiyun Wang2, Xiangyu Pan2, Tianhai Lin1, Yong Jiang3, Bo Wang2, Huan Xu3, Yuying Wang2, Yucen Yang2, Jian Wang2, Lei Zhao2, Jiapeng Zhang1, Ailing Zhong2, Yiman Peng2, Jiajia Du2, Qi Zhang2, Jianan Zheng2, Jingyao Chen2, Siqi Dai2, Feifei Na4, Zhenghao Lu5, Jiaming Liu1, Xiaonan Zheng1, Lu Yang1, Peng Zhang1, Ping Han1, Qiyong Gong6, Qian Zhong7, Kai Xiao8, Hanshuo Yang2, Hongxin Deng2, Yinglan Zhao2, Hubing Shi2, Jianghong Man9, Maling Gou2, Chengjian Zhao2, Lunzhi Dai2, Zhihong Xue2, Lu Chen2, Yuan Wang2, Musheng Zeng7, Canhua Huang2, Qiang Wei10, Yuquan Wei2, Yu Liu11, Chong Chen12.
Abstract
Cisplatin-based chemotherapy remains the primary treatment for unresectable and metastatic muscle-invasive bladder cancers (MIBCs). However, tumors frequently develop chemoresistance. Here, we established a primary and orthotopic MIBC mouse model with gene-edited organoids to recapitulate the full course of chemotherapy in patients. We found that partial squamous differentiation, called semi-squamatization, is associated with acquired chemoresistance in both mice and human MIBCs. Multi-omics analyses showed that cathepsin H (CTSH) is correlated with chemoresistance and semi-squamatization. Cathepsin inhibition by E64 treatment induces full squamous differentiation and pyroptosis, and thus specifically restrains chemoresistant MIBCs. Mechanistically, E64 treatment activates the tumor necrosis factor pathway, which is required for the terminal differentiation and pyroptosis of chemoresistant MIBC cells. Our study revealed that semi-squamatization is a type of lineage plasticity associated with chemoresistance, suggesting that differentiation via targeting of CTSH is a potential therapeutic strategy for the treatment of chemoresistant MIBCs.Entities:
Keywords: E64; MIBC; TNF pathway; acquired chemoresistance; cathepsin H; differentiation therapy; lineage plasticity; pyroptosis; semi-squamatization
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Year: 2022 PMID: 36099882 DOI: 10.1016/j.ccell.2022.08.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Cell ISSN: 1535-6108 Impact factor: 38.585