Abstract
Small cell lung cancer (SCLC) is a high-grade malignancy of neuroendocrine origin characterized by ag-gressive cell growth and a poor survival rate of patients. Currently, the treatment options for SCLC remain limited despite platinum-based chemotherapy. Systemic chemotherapy is effective for SCLC, but most patients eventu-ally acquire drug resistance, which leads to treatment failure. Stemness-high cancer cells show characteristics of advanced tumorigenesis and metastasis and have high potential in promoting treatment resistance and disease relapse. Napabucasin (BBI608), a novel small-molecule drug targeting on signal transducer and activator of tran-scription 3 (STAT3), was shown to suppress the progression and metastasis of stemness-high cancer stem cells in various cancers. Here, we demonstrated that napabucasin significantly decreased viability and colony formation and induced the arrest of S-phase cell cycle and apoptosis in cisplatin-resistant SCLC cells. Findings from mechanis-tic studies further indicated that napabucasin directly downregulated the expression of SOX2 in cisplatin-resistant SCLC cells; however, dysfunctional SOX2 expression in SCLC cells was associated with interference in the napabu-casin-mediated reduction of cell viability. In contrast, napabucasin-induced viability reduction was restored in these cells when SOX2 expression was upregulated. Furthermore, napabucasin significantly inhibited cisplatin-resistant SCLC cell xenograft growth in vivo by downregulating SOX2 and inducing apoptosis. These data demonstrate that napabucasin may be a novel drug for the clinical treatment of cisplatin-resistant SCLC.
| Original language | American English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 4637 |
| Journal | American Journal of Cancer Research |
| Volume | 12 |
| Issue number | 10 |
| State | Published - 2022 |
Keywords
- APOPTOSIS
- C-MYC
- CONTRIBUTES
- EVOLUTION
- LINES
- OCT3/4
- RELAPSE
- RESISTANCE
- SOX2
- STAT3
- SURVIVIN
- Small cell lung cancer
- cisplatin
- napabucasin
- resistant
- stemness