4.3 Article

MicroRNA-25 regulates chemoresistance-associated autophagy in breast cancer cells, a process modulated by the natural autophagy inducer isoliquiritigenin

Journal

ONCOTARGET
Volume 5, Issue 16, Pages 7013-7026

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.2192

Keywords

Autophagy; Drug resistance; miRNA-25; ULK1; Isoliquiritigenin; Breast cancer

Funding

  1. Health and Medical Research Fund (HMRF) of Hong Kong [11121951]
  2. Seed funding programme for basic research of the university of Hong Kong [201211159095]
  3. Small project funding of the university of Hong Kong [201209176138]
  4. Prestigious herbalist Lin Yi's experience inheritance project - state administration of Traditional Chinese Medicine of China [12BMaa03]

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Recent findings have revealed that dysregulated miRNAs contribute significantly to autophagy and chemoresistance. Pharmacologically targeting autophagy-related miRNAs is a novel strategy to reverse drug resistance. Here, we report a novel function of isoliquiritigenin (ISL) as a natural inhibitor of autophagy-related miR-25 in killing drug-resistant breast cancer cells. ISL induced chemosensitization, cell cycle arrest and autophagy, but not apoptosis, in MCF-7/ADR cells. ISL also promoted the degradation of the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) protein ABCG2 primarily via the autophagy-lysosome pathway. More importantly, miRNA 3.0 array experiments identified miR-25 as the main target of ISL in triggering autophagy flux. A mechanistic study validated that miR-25 inhibition led to autophagic cell death by directly increasing ULK1 expression, an early regulator in the autophagy induction phase. miR-25 overexpression was demonstrated to block ISL-induced autophagy and chemosensitization. Subsequent in vivo experiments showed that ISL had chemosensitizing potency, as revealed by an increase in LC3-II staining, the downregulation of ABCG2, a reduction in miR-25 expression and the activation of the miR-25 target ULK1. Overall, our results not only indicate that ISL acts as a natural autophagy inducer to increase breast cancer chemosensitivity, but also reveal that miR-25 functions as a novel regulator of autophagy by targeting ULK1.

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