The Clinical Relevance of the miR-197/CKS1B/STAT3-mediated PD-L1 Network in Chemoresistant Non-small-cell Lung Cancer

Yu Fujita(Jikei University School of Medicine), Shigehiro Yagishita, Keitaro Hagiwara, Yusuke Yoshioka, Nobuyoshi Kosaka, Fumitaka Takeshita, Tomohiro Fujiwara, Koji Tsuta(Tokyo National Hospital), Hiroshi Nokihara, Tomohide Tamura, Hisao Asamura(Tokyo National Hospital), Makoto Kawaishi(Jikei University School of Medicine), Kazuyoshi Kuwano(Jikei University School of Medicine), Takahiro Ochiya
Molecular Therapy
January 19, 2015
Cited by 260Open Access
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Abstract

Programmed cell death ligand-1 (PD-L1) has recently gained considerable attention for its role in tumor immune escape. Here, we identify a miR-197/CKS1B/STAT3-mediated PD-L1 network in chemoresistant non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), independent of immunoinhibitory signals. miR-197 is downregulated in platinum-resistant NSCLC specimens, resulting in the promotion of chemoresistance, tumorigenicity, and pulmonary metastasis in vitro and in vivo. Mechanistic investigations reveal that a miR-197-mediated CKS1B/STAT3 axis exerts tumor progression regulated by various oncogenic genes (Bcl-2, c-Myc, and cyclin D1), and PD-L1 is a putative biomarker of this axis. Furthermore, we demonstrate that a miR-197 mimic sensitizes PD-L1(high) drug-resistant cells to chemotherapy. These results indicate that the biological interaction between PD-L1 and chemoresistance occurs through the microRNA regulatory cascade. More importantly, expression levels of miR-197 are inversely correlated with PD-L1 expression (n = 177; P = 0.026) and are associated with worse overall survival (P = 0.015). Our discoveries suggest that the miR-197/CKS1B/STAT3-mediated network can drive tumor PD-L1 expression as a biomarker of this cascade, and miR-197 replacement therapy may be a potential treatment strategy for chemoresistant NSCLC.


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