IRE1α inhibitor reduces cisplatin resistance in ovarian cancer by modulating IRE1α/XBP1 pathway

Shiyi Lv & Zhengfang Yi et al. · 2024-11-20

Ovarian cancer, a leading cause of gynecological cancer deaths globally, poses significant treatment challenges. Cisplatin (CDDP) is the first treatment choice for ovarian cancer and it is initially effective. However, 80% of ovarian cancer patients eventually relapse and develop resistance, resulting in chemotherapy failure. Therefore, finding new treatment combinations to overcome ovarian cancer resistance can provide a new tactic to improve the ovarian cancer patients' survival rate. We first identified activation of the Unfolded Protein Response (UPR) in CDDP-resistant ovarian cancer cells, implicating the IRE1α/XBP1 pathway in promoting resistance. Our findings demonstrate that inhibiting IRE1α signaling can re-sensitizes resistant cells to CDDP in vivo and in vitro, suggesting that IRE1α inhibitor used in conjunction with CDDP presumably could merge as a novel therapeutic strategy. Here, our research highlights the critical role of IRE1α signaling in mediating CDDP resistance, and paves the way for improved treatment options through combinatorial therapy.
Authors
Shiyi Lv, Lin Zhang, Min Wu, Shuangshuang Zhu, Yixue Wang, Layang Liu, Yunxuan Li, Ting Zhang, Yujie Wu, Huang Chen, Mingyao Liu, Zhengfang Yi
Funding

National Natural Science Foundation of China

82202897

National Natural Science Foundation of China

82073310

Shanghai Rising-Star Program

23QB1405600

ECNU Construction Fund of Innovation and Entrepreneurship Laboratory

44400-20201-532300/021

The Jointed PI Program from Shanghai Changning Maternity and Infant Health Hospital and Changning District Health System (PI) Research Team Project Funding

PI202430