Cell Death and Disease (Feb 2025)

RAB33A promotes metastasis via RhoC accumulation through non-canonical autophagy in cervical cancer

  • Lanqing Huo,
  • Xiaodan Huang,
  • Ying Wang,
  • Yi Ouyang,
  • Xueping Zheng,
  • Yingyi Ouyang,
  • Xinping Cao,
  • Kai Chen,
  • Denghui Wei,
  • Yuanzhong Wu,
  • Ruhua Zhang,
  • Yujie Lin,
  • Tiebang Kang,
  • Ying Gao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41419-025-07455-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Cervical cancer metastasis is characterized by the systemic spread of tumor cells. However, the underlying mechanism remains incompletely understood. Herein, we demonstrate that RAB33A promoted metastasis by enhancing RhoC accumulation and that higher RAB33A expression predicted poorer prognosis in patients with cervical cancer. Mechanistically, RhoC typically degraded via canonical autophagy due to the binding of two LIR motifs (LC3 interaction region) in RhoC to LC3; however, RAB33A induced non-canonical autophagy, resulting in RhoC stabilization, which facilitated pseudopodia formation and consequently cervical cancer metastasis. The fusion of RAB33A-induced autophagosomes with lysosomes was impaired, as RAB33A inactivated RAB7 by interacting with TBC1D2A, a GTPase-activating protein that targets RAB7. Our findings reveal a pivotal role of the RAB33A-RhoC axis in cervical cancer metastasis, indicating that RhoC inhibitors may be beneficial for treating cervical cancer patients with high levels of RAB33A.