Molecular Therapy: Nucleic Acids (Dec 2020)

GC-Derived EVs Enriched with MicroRNA-675-3p Contribute to the MAPK/PD-L1-Mediated Tumor Immune Escape by Targeting CXXC4

  • Ping Li,
  • Xingdong Luo,
  • Yue Xie,
  • Pengfei Li,
  • Fangyong Hu,
  • Junfeng Chu,
  • Xiaojun Chen,
  • Wenbo Song,
  • Ali Wang,
  • Guangyu Tian,
  • Xiang Gu

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22
pp. 615 – 626

Abstract

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MicroRNAs (miRNAs) delivered by gastric cancer (GC)-secreted extracellular vesicles (GC-EVs) are associated with the immune escape in GC. Microarray analysis based on the GEO: GSE112369 dataset identified the presence of poorly expressed CXXC finger protein 4 (CXXC4) in GC, which was validated in clinical samples of GC patients. Moreover, prediction based on TargetScan analysis demonstrated the putative miR-675-3p binding site in the 3′ UTR region of CXXC4. Thereby, our study aims to determine the role of GC-EV-encapsulated miR-675-3p in GC. First, CXXC4 was found to be negatively correlated with programmed cell death 1 ligand 1 (PD-L1). The effects of mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling on GC were evaluated using activator of the MAPK pathway. The overexpression of CXXC4 led to a downregulated MAPK signaling pathway, thus decreasing PD-L1 expression to augment the proliferation and activation of T cells co-cultured with GC HGC-27 cells. GC-EV-encapsulated miR-675-3p negatively regulated the expression of its target gene CXXC4. GC-EV-encapsulated miR-675-3p increased PD-L1 expression to stimulate the immune escape in vitro and EV-encapsulated miR-675-3p accelerated cisplatin resistance in vivo. Collectively, the aforementioned findings present a mechanism in which EV-mediated miR-675-3p upregulates PD-L1 expression, promoting immune escape in GC.

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