Cancer Medicine (Aug 2024)
RBBP4: A novel diagnostic and prognostic biomarker for non‐small‐cell lung cancer correlated with autophagic cell death
Abstract
Abstract Background Non‐small‐cell lung cancer (NSCLC) often presents at later stages, typically associated with poor prognosis. Autophagy genes play a role in the progression of tumors. This study investigated the clinical relevance, prognostic value, and biological significance of RBBP4 in NSCLC. Methods We assessed RBBP4 expression using the GSE30219 and TCGA NSCLC datasets and NSCLC cells, exploring its links with clinical outcomes, tumor immunity, and autophagy genes through bioinformatics analysis after transcriptome sequencing of RBBP4‐knockdown and control PC9 cells. We identified differentially expressed genes (DEGs) and conducted Gene Ontology, Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes pathway enrichment, and protein–protein interaction network analyses. The significance of autophagy‐related DEGs was evaluated for diagnosis and prognosis using the GSE30219 dataset. Experiments both in vivo and in vitro explored the biological mechanisms behind RBBP4‐mediated autophagic cell death in NSCLC. Results RBBP4 overexpression in NSCLC correlates with a poorer prognosis. Eighteen types of immune cell were significantly enriched in cultures that had low RBBP4 expression compared high expression. DEGs associated with RBBP4 are enriched in autophagy pathways. Transcriptomic profiling of the PC9 cell line identified autophagy‐related DEGs associated with RBBP4 that exhibited differential expression in NSCLC, suggesting prognostic applications. In vitro experiments demonstrated that RBBP4 knockdown induced autophagy and apoptosis in PC9 cells, promoting cell death, which was inhibited by 3‐MA. In vivo, targeted siRNA against RBBP4 significantly reduced tumor development in PC9 cell‐injected nude mice, elevating autophagy‐related protein levels and inducing apoptosis and necrosis in tumor tissues. Conclusion In NSCLC, RBBP4 upregulation correlates with poor prognosis and altered immunity. Its knockdown induces autophagic cell death in NSCLC cells. These results indicate RBBP4 as a potential NSCLC diagnostic marker and its autophagy modulation as a prospective therapeutic target.
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