Investigator
Hebei University Of Economics And Business
FGF13 enhances resistance to platinum drugs by regulating hCTR1 and ATP7A via a microtubule‐stabilizing effect
AbstractPlatinum‐based regimens are the most widely used chemotherapy regimens, but cancer cells often develop resistance, which impedes therapy outcome for patients. Previous studies have shown that fibroblast growth factor 13 (FGF13) is associated with resistance to platinum drugs in HeLa cells. However, the mechanism and universality of this effect have not been clarified. Here, we found that FGF13 was associated with poor platinum‐based chemotherapy outcomes in a variety of cancers, such as lung, endometrial, and cervical cancers, through bioinformatics analysis. We then found that FGF13 simultaneously regulates the expression and distribution of hCTR1 and ATP7A in cancer cells, causes reduced platinum influx, and promotes platinum sequestration and efflux upon cisplatin exposure. We subsequently observed that FGF13‐mediated platinum resistance requires the microtubule‐stabilizing effect of FGF13. Only overexpression of FGF13 with the ‐SMIYRQQQ‐ tubulin‐binding domain could induce the platinum resistance effect. This phenomenon was also observed in SK‐MES‐1 cells, KLE cells, and 5637 cells. Our research reveals the mechanism of FGF13‐induced platinum drug resistance and suggests that FGF13 can be a sensibilization target and prognostic biomarker for chemotherapy.
The combined immunization of cervical cancer therapeutic vaccine based on Listeria balanced lethal system has a significant therapeutic effect on tumor model mice
Cervical cancer is the fourth most common cancer and the fourth leading cause of cancer death in women. Effective treatment of cervical cancer is urgently needed. Tumor therapeutic vaccine is a research hotspot in tumor immunotherapy, and the tumor therapeutic vaccine based on attenuated live bacteria carrier has clinical application prospect because of its clear action site and high safety. The bacterial balanced lethal system uses nutritional screening instead of antibiotic screening to avoid the risk of the spread of antibiotic resistance. So it is generally recognized as a green carrier. In our early research, we have constructed two cervical cancer therapeutic vaccine candidates (LM-HPVCW-1 and LI-HPVCW-1) based on Listeria balanced lethal system via transforming the nutrient-deficient strains with nutrition gene complementary plasmid. The complementary plasmid contained the nutrition complementary gene, LM dal gene, and its Amp gene was replaced with asd gene to delete the antibiotic resistance. Besides, it carried the shuffled HPV-16 E6E7 fusion protein gene. In vitro experiments showed that the plasmid carried by the candidate strain could be stably passaged and the target protein could be successfully expressed. In this study, we proved that the two candidate strains were safe in vivo and induced cellular immune response. At the same time, by establishing a tumor-bearing mouse model, it was proved that the two vaccine strains combined immunization could effectively inhibit mouse tumors. The mechanism of tumor suppression may be related to breaking the immunosuppression of tumor microenvironment and inducing CD8
Listeria-vectored cervical cancer vaccine candidate strains reduce MDSCs via the JAK-STAT signaling pathway
Abstract Background Immunosuppressive status is prevalent in cancer patients and increases the complexity of tumor immunotherapy. It has been found that Listeria-vectored tumor vaccines had the potential ability of two-side regulatory effect on the immune response during immunotherapy. Results The results show that the combined immunotherapy with the LM∆E6E7 and LI∆E6E7, the two cervical cancer vaccine candidate strains constructed by our lab, improves the antitumor immune response and inhibits the suppressive immune response in tumor-bearing mice in vivo, confirming the two-sided regulatory ability of the immune response caused by Listeria-vectored tumor vaccines. The immunotherapy reduces the expression level of myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs)-inducing factors and then inhibits the phosphorylation level of STAT3 protein, the regulatory factor of MDSCs differentiation, to reduce the MDSCs formation ability. Moreover, vaccines reduce the expression of functional molecules associated with MDSCs may by inhibiting the phosphorylation level of the JAK1-STAT1 and JAK2-STAT3 pathways in tumor tissues to attenuate the immunosuppressive function of MDSCs. Conclusions Immunotherapy with Listeria-vectored cervical cancer vaccines significantly reduces the level and function of MDSCs in vivo, which is the key point to the destruction of immunosuppression. The study for the first to elucidate the mechanism of breaking the immunosuppression.
Ph.D.
Hebei Medical University · Pharmacology