Journal of Translational Medicine (Oct 2023)

Targeting RPA promotes autophagic flux and the antitumor response to radiation in nasopharyngeal carcinoma

  • Yanchun Feng,
  • Yingming Jiang,
  • Jun Liu,
  • Jiaqi Liu,
  • Mengchen Shi,
  • Junxiong Chen,
  • Jingdan Zhang,
  • Yu Tian,
  • Xiangling Yang,
  • Huanliang Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12967-023-04574-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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Abstract Background Autophagy is involved in nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) radioresistance. Replication protein A 1 (RPA1) and RPA3, substrates of the RPA complex, are potential therapeutic targets for reversing NPC radioresistance. Nevertheless, the role of RPA in autophagy is not adequately understood. This investigation was performed to reveal the cytotoxic mechanism of a pharmacologic RPA inhibitor (RPAi) in NPC cells and the underlying mechanism by which RPAi-mediated autophagy regulates NPC radiosensitivity. Methods and results We characterized a potent RPAi (HAMNO) that was substantially correlated with radiosensitivity enhancement and proliferative inhibition of in vivo and in NPC cell lines in vitro. We show that the RPAi induced autophagy at multiple levels by inducing autophagic flux, AMPK/mTOR pathway activation, and autophagy-related gene transcription by decreasing glycolytic function. We hypothesized that RPA inhibition impaired glycolysis and increased NPC dependence on autophagy. We further demonstrated that combining autophagy inhibition with chloroquine (CQ) treatment or genetic inhibition of the autophagy regulator ATG5 and RPAi treatment was more effective than either approach alone in enhancing the antitumor response of NPC to radiation. Conclusions Our study suggests that HAMNO is a potent RPAi that enhances radiosensitivity and induces autophagy in NPC cell lines by decreasing glycolytic function and activating autophagy-related genes. We suggest a novel treatment strategy in which pharmacological inhibitors that simultaneously disrupt RPA and autophagic processes improve NPC responsiveness to radiation.

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